By EMMIE V. ABADILLA
While all regular scheduled international passenger and domestic flights remain suspended under the extended lockdown, flag carrier Philippine Airlines (PAL) continues to operate repatriation and all-cargo flights.
PAL is scheduled to operate a one-time flight to Milan, Italy, today (April 28, Tuesday) for another round of repatriation flights.
Over the weekend, a PAL plane flew from Manila to the Maldives to repatriate 336 stranded Filipinos.
For the first time in 79 years, the flag carrier landed at the Velana International Airport in Male, the Maldives.
The island nation is not among the destinations that PAL services.
However, the flag carrier operated the repatriation flight in collaboration with the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and the Philippine Consulate in the Republic of Maldives.
Last week, a PAL flight to London ferried back British nationals and returned carrying Filipinos.
Since March 24, PAL has operated flights to Vancouver, Toronto, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, London, Auckland, and a few Asian destinations, all bringing home stranded Filipinos. PAL has always played a vital role in repatriating Filipinos, even from countries not in the airline's destination list, during times of war or civil unrest.
In 1991, Philippine Airlines repatriated Filipinos from the Gulf area during Operation Desert Storm.
In 2014, PAL brought home Filipinos from Libya during the time of a civil war in Libya. The Filipinos were brought back from Malta to Manila. But inasmuch as the world is besieged by the CoviD-19 pandemic today, PAL takes extra precautionary measures to ensure the safety of every flight.
The airline provides Personal Protective Equipment for their flight attendants to ensure their safety.
The flag carrier also adheres to strict government-imposed safety protocols.