Full list of airlines still flying from the UK as thousands remain stranded abroad
AIRLINES around the world have been forced to ground thousands of their planes due to the coronavirus pandemic.
However, a number of flights are still in operation even today.
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The current crisis has led to countries closing their borders in an attempt to reduce the spread of the virus.
This means airlines are suspending flights with millions of holidays being disrupted, with TUI and Jet2 the latest to announce they are grounding their fleet.
Some flights are still operating from UK airports today, despite the latest government advice warning against all non-essential travel indefinitely.
These include routes to Asia and the US, as well as Europe and domestic flights.
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Manchester Airport
LoganAir are operating the majority of flights from Manchester Airport, with mainly UK destinations:
- Southampton
- Jersey
- Aberdeen
- Belfast
- Newquay
- Exeter
- Amsterdam
- Paris
- Dusseldorf
Other airlines include:
- British Airways - Dublin, Hamad
- Etihad - Oslo, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Dublin
- Garuda - Amsterdam, Abu Dhabi
- Virgin Atlantic - Bridgeton, Amsterdam
FLY AWAY HOME Only 9 countries are allowing Brits to enter as the rest of the world bans tourists due to coronavirus
Birmingham Airport
- LoganAir - Aberdeen, Glasgow, Edinburgh
- British Airways - Dublin
- Air India - Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Belfast
Bristol Airport
- Alitalia - Amsterdam
- Virgin Atlantic - Amsterdam
Newcastle Airport
- Eastern Airways - Aberdeen, Southampton
- KLM - Amsterdam
Leeds Airport
- Eastern Airways - Southampton
- Virgin Atlantic - Amsterdam
Almost a million British travellers have been left stranded all over the world as airlines and borders shut down.
Thousands of Brits that have been left abroad are being charged up to ten times the standard return fare for a one-way ticket home.
This led to the Foreign Secretary confirming that British Airways, easyJet, Jet2 and Virgin are working together to get Brits home, and extra flights are being chartered where commercial flights have all been cancelled.