Staff members at Brussels national airport and rescuers stand outside the terminal for a ceremony following bomb attacks in Brussels metro and Belgium's National airport of Zaventem. (Reuters file photo)
Frankfurt:
Belgium's Brussels Airways, 45-per cent owned by Deutsche Lufthansa, is chalking up 5 million euros ($5.6 million) in daily costs from the closure of its Brussels hub after last week's attacks.
Both the expenses from rerouting passenger traffic and lost revenues are weighing on the bottom line, a Brussels Airways spokesman said.
Belgium's regional airports in Antwerp and Liege offer only limited short-haul capacity as an alternative, he said.
Brussels airport on Tuesday began trying out a make-shift check-in area that could allow a limited restart of passenger flights in the coming days to end the airport's shutdown after suicide bombers struck Belgium's capital a week ago.
Brussels Airlines last week restarted some commercial flights from Belgium via Liege and Antwerp.
Both the expenses from rerouting passenger traffic and lost revenues are weighing on the bottom line, a Brussels Airways spokesman said.
Belgium's regional airports in Antwerp and Liege offer only limited short-haul capacity as an alternative, he said.
Brussels airport on Tuesday began trying out a make-shift check-in area that could allow a limited restart of passenger flights in the coming days to end the airport's shutdown after suicide bombers struck Belgium's capital a week ago.
Brussels Airlines last week restarted some commercial flights from Belgium via Liege and Antwerp.
© Thomson Reuters 2016
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