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We'll be flying high again soon

El Al’s chief of UK operations, on strategy, competition and flying from Manchester.

September 16, 2010 10:21
170910 el al

ByCandice Krieger, Candice Krieger

3 min read

With soaring competition, the recession and ongoing unrest in the Middle East, El Al has had a tough few years: the national carrier lost around 10 per cent of its market share of UK passengers flying to Israel over 2008 and 2009.

But the airline is battling back. Uri Danoor, chief executive of its operations in the UK, northern Europe and South Africa, says that the airline has come up with new ways of clawing back business.

He says: "The past few years have been one of the most challenging periods for El Al in the UK. The events in Gaza at the start of 2009 had a major effect. We suffered a lot in 2009."

He also attributes the decline to "a combined factor of the financial crisis - which affected UK passenger demand more than any other country - plus very fierce competition from other airlines because of the open skies agreement between the UK and Israel. Everything came at the same time."
El Al made a loss of $76m in 2009.