"We are not in favour of the ban. We would like connectivity to be restored as soon as possible," International Air Transport Association (IATA) CEO and Director General Alexandre de Juniac said in response to questions.
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have severed diplomatic ties and cut off transport links with Qatar.
A large number of Indians, who travel to the US or Europe via Doha, would be impacted as the air travel links to Qatar, including overflights, have been severed by these nations.
On the impact of the ban on personal electronic devices (PED) announced by the US on March 21, the route-level data from March showed that revenue passengers per kilometres flown by the Middle East airlines to the US fell in year-on-year terms by 2.8 per cent for the month.
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The International Air Transport Association (IATA), which is holding its annual meet and the World Air Transport Summit here, has come out with data showing India's domestic traffic revenue growing at a rate of 15.3 per cent per kilometre with a passenger load factor of over 85 per cent.
"Traffic on Asia-Europe routes continues to recover from the terrorism-related slowdowns last year. Capacity rose 7.6 per cent and load factor jumped 2.4 percentage points to 80.3," IATA officials said.
Overall, the IATA's global passenger traffic data for April showed that demand (measured in revenue passenger kilometres or RPKs) rose by 10.7 per cent compared to April 2016, which was the fastest pace in six years.
April capacity (available seat kilometres or ASKs) increased by 7.1 per cent globally and load factor climbed 2.7 percentage points to 82 per cent, which is a record for the month of April, the data showed.
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