The measures follow the crash last Saturday of Metrojet's Airbus A321-200 that killed all 224 people on board. The plane crashed 23 minutes after takeoff from Sharm el-Sheikh en route to St Petersburg, with mostly Russian tourists aboard.
Russia and Egypt have dismissed Western suggestions that a bomb may have caused the crash, saying the speculation was a rush to judgment and insisting the investigation must run its course.
The crash prompted companies to ground flights from and to the Red Sea resort, stranding thousands of tourists this week.
EasyJet said it will run nine flights today from the Red Sea resort to London and one to Milan, while Monarch will have two scheduled flights and three additional flights. Neither carrier is operating passenger flights from the UK to Sharm el-Sheikh.
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On today morning, dozens of busses waited outside the Sharm el-Sheikh airport, the line stretching up to a kilometer (half mile) as police inspected each vehicle, ferrying mostly Russian and British tourists to the airport.
Inside the crowded airport, British tourists said today they were just anxious to get home.
"We were in the first flights that were cancelled Wednesday night, we were already queuing to board," said Amy Johnson, a 27-year-old British administrative assistant hoping to catch one of Friday's EasyJet flights out of Sharm el-Sheikh.
Standing in a crush of hundreds waiting to pass through security, Johnson said she didn't feel that British authorities have adequately supported the stranded tourists.
Another tourist, Terrance Mathurian, a British builder traveling with his family, said they were told by hotel staff in the morning to head to the airport, following conflicting information.