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Since 2023, India's dominant domestic airline has also had a leasing arrangement with state-backed Turkish Airlines, which has provided two planes with pilots and some crew to IndiGo to operate on ...
Currently, IndiGo operates two widebody Boeing 777 jets, also on damp lease, from Turkish Airlines for its India-Istanbul routes. The upcoming deal with Qatar Airways will mirror this arrangement ...
The announcement came on a day when IndiGo signed an MoU with Airbus to convert 30 options for A350 to firm orders. The airline had placed an order for 30 A350s with options for 70 more in 2024.
Currently, IndiGo is operating two B777-300 ER aircraft under damp lease from Turkish Airlines. These planes are used by IndiGo to operate direct flights from Delhi and Mumbai to Istanbul.
IndiGo from July 24 will add its code to Turkish’s daily flights between Istanbul Airport (IST) and CMN. The Indian airline says in a statement that it now places its code on Turkish flights to ...
IndiGo, India’s biggest airline, plans to offer flights to North America using a codeshare agreement with Turkish Airlines, and continues to discuss ways to get compensation from manufacturers ...
Turkish Airlines Chairman Ahmet Bolat wants United Airlines to return to Istanbul and also reveals how many Boeing 777-300s could be wet-leased to IndiGo beyond the initial three.
For example, Indigo connects 33 destinations in Europe offered by a code share with Turkish Airlines, in which travelers fly on an Indigo wide-bodied aircraft from India to Istanbul and then ...
IndiGo's code share agreement with Turkish Airlines and Virgin Atlantic has increased connections to Europe, where the Indian carrier is adding capacity to meet growing demand for air travel.