With the
number of deaths and cases in America rapidly accelerating — more than 780
people have died so far — the World Health Organization has warned that the US
could establish itself as the new epicentre of the coronavirus pandemic.
Chinese
students are paying tens of thousands of pounds for seats on private jets to
escape the US, as the country’s coronavirus outbreak threatens to spiral out of
control.
In a world of
closed borders and grounded commercial planes, those people with the means to
are now fleeing the country in anticipation of a nationwide lockdown that would
further restrict movement in and out of the US.
Rather than
making the long 60-hour journey home via a series of transit hops over the
Pacific, wealthy Chinese students are using private planes to ensure their safe
return home.
Annelies
Garcia, commercial director for Private Fly, a global booking service for
charter flights, said education agents and American schools were typically
“making contact on behalf of the Chinese families looking to group together to
arrange a private charter, given the lack of airline flights”.
Whereas the
first two months of the year saw a spike in private jet flights out of China to
the US, Australia and elsewhere, the phenomenon has since been flipped on its
head as the pandemic takes root in the West while Asia slowly returns to
normality.
Earlier this
month, Hong Kong international airport reported one of its busiest days on
record for private jet activity, as wealthy residents and Chinese visitors
rushed back to the region.
This comes
amid a reduction in commercial flights, which is making it harder for people
living and working overseas to return home.
ForwardKeys,
a travel analytics company, has estimated that as many as 3.3 million seats on
transatlantic flights alone are disappearing, while aviation data provider
VariFlight recorded that 3,102 out of 3,800 planned commercial flights to and
from China were cancelled on Tuesday.
Jeff Gong, a
lawyer in Shanghai, said his daughter, a high school student in Wisconsin, had
“begged” him to fly her home after he asked whether she wanted 180,000 yuan
(£21,440) as pocket money or a one-way ticket on a private flight.
“My daughter
begged me to get her back home ... She said ‘No papa, I don’t want the money, I
want to go home’,” Mr Gong told Reuters.
Richard
Zaher, CEO of a US-based private jet charter, said that while his usual clients
were “flying as they normally do”, his company had seen a surge in queries from
people who had never flown private before.
“Inquiries
have gone through the roof,” he told AFP, noting his company Paramount Business
Jets had seen a 400 percent increase in queries, with bookings up roughly 20-25
percent. “It is completely coronavirus,” he added.
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