Czech Airlines plans to open new regular service from Prague to Perm
in the Russian Federation at the changeover from the current winter
season to the following summer season. The airline plans to operate two
return flights a week to Perm, which will be Czech Airlines’ eighth
destination and eleventh regular service to the Russian Federation
operated from Prague or Karlovy Vary, joining Yekaterinburg, Moscow,
Nizhny Novgorod, St. Petersburg, Rostov-on-Don, Samara and Ufa. By
harmonising its departure and arrival waves, Czech Airlines offers ideal
connections between the new Perm service and the airline’s flights
to/from Berlin, Brussels, Budapest, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Copenhagen,
Milan, Munich, Nice, Paris, Rome and Stockholm, with a comfortable
transfer in Prague.
Czech Airlines plans to operate two return flights a week to Perm. From Prague, the airline’s aircraft will depart every Thursday and Sunday, 15 minutes before Midnight, arriving in Perm the next morning at 7:50. From Bolshoye Saving Perm International Airport, the service will leave every Monday and Friday morning at 9:05, arriving at Václav Havel Airport Prague at 9:30. Czech Airlines has already officially received carriage rights for the service.
Czech Airlines currently operates ten scheduled routes between the Czech Republic and the Russian Federation – three from Karlovy Vary (to Moscow, St. Petersburg and Samara), and seven from Prague (to Yekaterinburg, Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, St. Petersburg, Rostov-on-Don, Samara and Ufa). The planned service to Perm will be the eleventh. Czech Airlines will deploy Airbus A319 aircraft on the service. The complimentary in-flight service on the new route includes a full-fledged warm meal, even for passengers in Economy Class, a wide selection of hot and cold non-alcoholic beverages, Czech beer, and Moravian wine.
“A year ago, in connection with its new service to Ufa, Czech Airlines announced that it is planning more new services and an expansion of its business activities on the Russian market. The start of operations to Nizhny Novgorod in the 2012 summer season and the currently planned service to Perm serve as concrete results of the airline’s work. But that is not all that Czech Airlines is planning for the 2013 summer season concerning post-soviet markets,” said Jiří Marek, a member of the Management Board and Vice-President of Czech Airlines for Sales and Marketing.
In the current winter season, Czech Airlines has, for example, increased the number of frequencies to both recently opened destinations – Nizhny Novgorod and Ufa – by one a week. The airline also added one frequency to Rostov-on-Don, increasing the number of flights to four a week.
Czech Airlines plans to operate two return flights a week to Perm. From Prague, the airline’s aircraft will depart every Thursday and Sunday, 15 minutes before Midnight, arriving in Perm the next morning at 7:50. From Bolshoye Saving Perm International Airport, the service will leave every Monday and Friday morning at 9:05, arriving at Václav Havel Airport Prague at 9:30. Czech Airlines has already officially received carriage rights for the service.
Czech Airlines currently operates ten scheduled routes between the Czech Republic and the Russian Federation – three from Karlovy Vary (to Moscow, St. Petersburg and Samara), and seven from Prague (to Yekaterinburg, Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, St. Petersburg, Rostov-on-Don, Samara and Ufa). The planned service to Perm will be the eleventh. Czech Airlines will deploy Airbus A319 aircraft on the service. The complimentary in-flight service on the new route includes a full-fledged warm meal, even for passengers in Economy Class, a wide selection of hot and cold non-alcoholic beverages, Czech beer, and Moravian wine.
“A year ago, in connection with its new service to Ufa, Czech Airlines announced that it is planning more new services and an expansion of its business activities on the Russian market. The start of operations to Nizhny Novgorod in the 2012 summer season and the currently planned service to Perm serve as concrete results of the airline’s work. But that is not all that Czech Airlines is planning for the 2013 summer season concerning post-soviet markets,” said Jiří Marek, a member of the Management Board and Vice-President of Czech Airlines for Sales and Marketing.
In the current winter season, Czech Airlines has, for example, increased the number of frequencies to both recently opened destinations – Nizhny Novgorod and Ufa – by one a week. The airline also added one frequency to Rostov-on-Don, increasing the number of flights to four a week.
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