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Air China Resumes Direct Flights To North Korea After Six Years Of Hibernation

12 articles | Updated 9m ago | Created 8h ago
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Air China has officially resumed direct flights between Beijing and Pyongyang, marking the end of a six-year hiatus on this route following reports from multiple international news outlets dated March 29-30. The carrier's flag ship service restarted its Monday schedule connecting Peking with North Korea's capital without further delay or additional conditions being specified in initial press releases.

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    China resumed direct flights on Air China aircraft from Beijing to Pyongyang, marking its first such service in six years.
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    This resumption of air travel occurred shortly after the restoration of passenger train services between both capitals.
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    The renewed flight schedule is cited by multiple sources as a sign that North Korea (DPRK) is gradually opening up economically and diplomatically.
2026-03-31 Air China flight departed Beijing Capital International Airport early Monday morning, marking the resumption of direct flights to Pyongyang after a six-year hiatus. This event was reported as occurring on March 30 (Monday) in various time zones.
2019-?? (Inferred context): Direct flight service between Beijing and Pyongyang ceased approximately five years prior to the report date, ending a six-year hiatus. The exact cessation year is not explicitly stated but implies an end around 2026 minus roughly half-decade based on 'six-years' phrasing in reports.
(LEAD) China's flag carrier resumes Beijing-Pyongyang direct flights: reports
China steps up North Korea connections as regular Beijing-Pyongyang flights resume
Corée du Nord : Air China reprend ses vols directs entre Pékin et Pyongyang, après six années d’interruption
Corée du Nord : les vols directs entre Pékin et Pyongyang ont repris ce lundi
China resumes direct flights to North Korea after six years

China's flag carrier Air China resumed direct flights between Beijing and Pyongyang on Monday (March 30), following the earlier restoration of passenger train services in early February. This development marks a return to travel after both modes had been suspended since late March, amidst ongoing diplomatic tensions regarding North Korea's missile tests despite recent high-level military cooperation visits by Kim Jong Un.