Finnair Oyj, the hardest-hit among European airlines from the closing of Russian airspace, is planning an overhaul of its strategy that would see a smaller operation pivoting westward. “As a first step, the first response when we are reviewing our strategy on the back of the Russian airspace closure, we have pivoted our network to the west, and we are also increasing routes in Southeast Asia,” CEO Topi Manner said at the carrier’s headquarters near the Helsinki-Vantaa airport on Thursday. “We cannot wait for the Russian airspace to be opened,” he said. “We need to adapt to this situation and we need to change the company.” Finland’s national carrier is reeling from a double whammy: first its Asia-reliant business suffered a worse blow than many of its peers from the pandemic, and in February the ban on using the Russian airspace left its strategy in tatters. It had carved out a niche providing transit passengers from smaller European cities the shortest flight times to Asia. But the flights through its Helsinki hub to destinations like Hong Kong, Seoul and Shanghai relied on access to Siberian airspace. Finnair now plans to pivot its network toward the US, including cities such as Dallas and Seattle, while also adding routes to south and Southeast Asia, most prominently India. Helsinki is set to remain its hub. “It makes sense to fly from Delhi or Mumbai via Helsinki to places like New York, Chicago, Seattle and Los Angeles,” Manner said. “Those connecting flows and the network logic will still be important for our business... Thailand works well too, and so does Singapore, especially because of the Australian traffic. “So in Southeast Asia, potentially also in the Middle East, we might have new opportunities.” While new routes will help mitigate the hit from the Asian flights Finnair can no longer profitably operate, they cannot completely replace the lost Asian traffic, the CEO said, adding that “we will need to resize the company when we review the strategy.”<br/>
oneworld
A Russian suspect accused of downing Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 told Dutch judges on Friday he had "nothing to do with the disaster", as the long-running trial concluded. Oleg Pulatov is one of four men on trial in absentia for shooting down the jetliner in July 2014 as it passed over war-torn eastern Ukraine, killing all 298 passengers on board. The trial is being held in the Netherlands as the Boeing 777 was flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur and most of the victims were Dutch. "I am not guilty. I have nothing to do with the disaster of July 17, 2014," Pulatov, said in a video statement played to the court. "I fully took part in the (court) procedure and there is irrefutable evidence that the prosecution did not explain the full circumstances of the crash," added Pulatov, speaking in Russian. "It is the prosecution's main aim to get a conviction by any means," said Pulatov, dressed in a blue shirt and jacket and speaking directly to the camera. "Acquit me," he then told judges at the hearing, which opened at a top-security courthouse near Schiphol airport in March 2020. A verdict is not expected until at least November 17, judges said on Friday. Presiding judge Hendrik Steenhuis said "the case has made a massive impression on all here in the courtroom and those outside." Russian nationals Igor Girkin, Sergei Dubinsky and Pulatov as well as Ukranian citizen Leonid Kharchenko have all refused to appear in court and are being tried in absentia. Only Pulatov has legal representation. The MH17 trial has taken on new significance since Russia's late February invasion of Ukraine, in which a slew of new war crimes are being alleged.<br/>