Udupi: President Ramanath Kovind arrived at Adi Udupi Helipad at 11:35am on Thursday.

Today, for the first time, the president is visiting Sri Vishweshastheertha of Pejavar Mutt. Through a special helicopter, the president arrived at the Adi Udupi Helipad. He will be going to the mutt in the afternoon and meet the Pejavar Shree. Later he will be visiting the Shri Krishna Mutt. Then he will return to Mangaluru.

Governor Vajubhai Vala, governor of Nagaland PB Acharya, Deputy Commissioner Priyanka Merry Francis, SP Laxman Nimbarigi, district in-charge Minister Jayamala, and others welcomed the President.

Let the Truth be known. If you read VB and like VB, please be a VB Supporter and Help us deliver the Truth to one and all.



New Delhi (PTI): Air India will operate its flights to North America and Europe using alternative routes over available airspaces in the Middle East and cancel six flights to various European cities on March 2.

The airline, which cancelled 50 international flights on Sunday, said it would extend suspension of all flights to and from the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Israel and Qatar till 23:59 hours (IST) on March 2.

In a post on X on Sunday, the carrier said six flights, including Amritsar-Birmingham (AI117) and Birmingham-Delhi (AI114), would be cancelled on Monday.

Besides, AI151 and A152 flights between Delhi and Zurich, as well as AI157 and AI158 flights between Delhi and Copenhagen, would be cancelled on Monday.

“All other flights to North America and Europe will operate as per schedule using alternative routings over available airspaces in the Middle East, which is expected to add to the flying times.

"Additionally, flights to New York (JFK) and Newark (Liberty International) will operate with technical stops at Rome (Fiumicino Airport)," Air India said.

With stops in Rome, the flying time for Air India flights to North America would increase and also result in increased operating expenses.

Since the Iran and Iraq airspaces remain closed, officials said the airline would take the Egypt route to reach Europe, which would mean 30-40 minutes of additional flying time.

The flights would take the route through Oman, the southern part of Saudi Arabia and Egypt for European and North American destinations, the officials added.

The airline also said that it continues to closely monitor the situation and has carefully assessed the evolving circumstances across multiple parameters, including safety, security, airspace availability, and operational feasibility, before deciding on these operations for March 2.

In the wake of the escalating Middle East crisis, flight operations have been significantly disrupted, with the civil aviation ministry saying Indian carriers cancelled 350 international flights on Sunday.