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easyJet launches first Glasgow flights to Turkish and Spanish cities

easyJet launches first Glasgow flights to Turkish and Spanish cities

The National27-06-2025
Discussing the new routes, Ali Gayward, easyJet's UK country manager, said the launch of its new flights and package holidays from Glasgow to Antalya and Reus "marks another exciting expansion" of the firm's Scottish network.
Jonathan Ford, portfolio manager at AGS Airports, added that it is "fantastic" to see the airline continue to invest in Glasgow Airport after so many years.
He said that the addition of these flights will be a popular option for those looking to escape for the summer holidays.
easyJet launches new flights from Glasgow Airport to Antalya and Reus.
The first easyJet flight to Reus will launch today and operate every Monday and Friday throughout the summer months.
The Spanish city, which was dubbed a "Catalonian gem", apparently offers travellers the opportunity to "uncover the charm" of modernist architecture, elegant boulevards, and a vibrant cultural scene.
Flights from Glasgow Airport to Antalya will start on Wednesday and will operate every Wednesday and Saturday.
This location is the place to be for Scottish "sun-seekers" looking to bask in the beauty of Turkey's Mediterranean coast.
Recommended Reading:
New route from Edinburgh Airport to Iceland launching this year
This comes after Icelandair announced the launch of a new Edinburgh to Reykjavik service from September to April.
The route, which will go to and from Keflavík International Airport, will fly up to four times a week.
The first flight will take off on Friday, September 12. It will then leave on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays.
However, this service will be reduced to three times a week from January to mid-February.
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Storm Floris weather maps track which parts of Wales will be hit hardest
Storm Floris weather maps track which parts of Wales will be hit hardest

Wales Online

time2 hours ago

  • Wales Online

Storm Floris weather maps track which parts of Wales will be hit hardest

Storm Floris weather maps track which parts of Wales will be hit hardest North Wales is set to be affected by strong winds, with the forecast agency advising people living in Conwy, Denbighshire, Flintshire, Gwynedd, and Isle of Anglesey to secure their properties, and prepare for power cuts It is unusual to have a storm at this time of year (Image: Andrew Teebay Liverpool Echo) Storm Floris is set to batter parts of the UK with winds of up to 85mph. Weather maps show which parts of Wales will be hit hardest amid the unseasonable storm. ‌ The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning for wind affecting parts of Wales, Scotland and England on Monday and Tuesday. North Wales is set to be affected by strong winds, with the forecast agency advising people living in Conwy, Denbighshire, Flintshire, Gwynedd, and Isle of Anglesey to secure their properties, and prepare for power cuts. ‌ Storm Floris is forecast to bring unseasonably strong winds to the UK on Monday, the Met Office said. Storm Floris is the sixth named storm of the 2024-25 naming season, which runs from early September to late August, and January's Storm Eowyn was the most recent. ‌ The strongest winds are most likely across Scotland during the afternoon and night, with gusts of up to 85mph possible along exposed coasts and hills. The agency has issued an amber warning for very strong winds in Scotland with Scots being warned to plan ahead, which you can read here. Trains and ferries have already been cancelled in Scotland, with Network Rail set to close a number of routes at 12pm on Monday. All other routes will see a reduced timetable and longer journey times due to speed restrictions. Train operator LNER has warned passengers not to travel north of Newcastle on Monday as a result of the forecast. The operator said, with tickets will be valid until Wednesday. ‌ Avanti West Coast advised passengers not to travel north of Preston on Monday as it expects its Scottish-English routes to be "heavily affected" by Storm Floris. On Sunday, the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo said it had cancelled its Monday show due to the storm. Other shows in Edinburgh are also expected to be axed. Met Office weather maps also show how strong the winds will get at specific times. Here are the weather maps for Wales and where will be hit the hardest by strong winds. ‌ Monday, August 4 3am Monday 3am (Image: Met Office) Just ahead of the yellow weather warning for strong winds, which comes in force at 6am, we see that during the early hours of Monday morning, there have been strong winds with a gust maximum of up to 30mph in areas such as Caernarfon in Gwynedd. At the same time, the gust maximum of up to 19mph was predicted for Cardiff. ‌ 9am Monday 9am (Image: Met Office) Six hours later and three hours into the weather warning, the maximum gust of wind can reach around 40-50mph, or as high as 54mph in areas such as Holyhead. In the more inland areas such as Wrexham and Monmouth the maximum gust of wind could reach the 30s. ‌ 12pm Monday 12pm (Image: Met Office) The north-westerly wind will settle in few coastal areas, around 45mph maximum gust in Aberystwyth, 43mph in Caernarfon and 40mph in Pembroke. ‌ 6pm Monday 6pm (Image: Met Office) The wind direction will have changed a little by the evening, coming more from the west. In north Wales, the coastal areas of Caernarfon (31mph) and Holyhead (31mph) could be experiencing less of a wind gust than inland areas such as St Asaph (39mph) and Wrexham (37mph), but only by a small margin. ‌ 9pm Monday 9pm (Image: Met Office) By the evening, the gusts of wind will have settled further, with most of Wales experiencing maximum gust of wind of around 20-30mph. ‌ 11pm Monday 11pm (Image: Met Office) The weather warning is likely to come to an end at around 11.59pm on Monday evening. ‌ Tuesday, August 5 4am Tuesday 4am (Image: Met Office) While there are no weather warnings issued for Wales for Tuesday, it is still set to be a windy day according to the weather maps. The maximum gust of wind could reach around 42mph in Aberystwyth, 41mph in Holyhead and 40mph in Caernarfon. The lowest could be around the low 20s, with a maximum gust of 22mph in areas such as Monmouth. ‌ 1pm Tuesday 1pm (Image: Met Office) By the afternoon, there will be a change in the direction, with the wind coming from the south east. It will be as high as 40mph in areas such as Wrexham and Newtown, as well as Hereford across the border. ‌ 7pm Tuesday 7pm (Image: Met Office) But the wind may have settled slightly for most of Wales by 7pm. ‌ 10pm Tuesday 10pm (Image: Met Office) And later that evening, the wind should have settled even further. Maximum gust of around 15mph in Newtown, 17mph in Wrexham and 18mph in Swansea. ‌ Scottish Transport Secretary Fiona Hyslop said a meeting had been held on Friday to ensure the country is ready for the storm, adding: "Given the unusual timing, and the fact some people will be on holiday, travelling or perhaps unaware, we are trying to raise even more awareness than usual of this potentially disruptive storm. "Please check with operators as we do expect rail, ferries, roads and bridges to be disrupted on Monday across the country. "This is a slightly unusual situation for August, however the message is the same as winter - plan ahead, check your journey in advance, allow extra time, and don't take any unnecessary risks." Article continues below Met Office chief meteorologist Matthew Lehnert said: "Across the warning area, many inland areas are likely to see gusts of 40-50mph, with 60-70mph more likely at higher elevations and around exposed coasts in Scotland. "There is a small chance that some locations here could even record gusts of 85mph."

Scots civil servants offered £100k ‘cushy jobs' abroad while Holyrood faces ‘significant financial pressure'
Scots civil servants offered £100k ‘cushy jobs' abroad while Holyrood faces ‘significant financial pressure'

Scottish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Scots civil servants offered £100k ‘cushy jobs' abroad while Holyrood faces ‘significant financial pressure'

'These cushy gigs are little more than taxpayer-funded platforms..." Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) CIVIL servants are being offered 'cushy' £100,000 pay packages to run Scottish Government offices in Denmark, Canada and China, we can reveal. The jobs are being advertised weeks after it emerged diplomats at the SNP ministers' international bases — dubbed 'pretend embassies' — have spent nearly £1million throwing 300 boozy parties. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Tories economy spokesman Murdo Fraser has hit out Credit: Alamy 2 Job adverts for 'Head of Scottish Government Office' roles are being advertised Credit: Getty Adverts for the 'Head of Scottish Government Office' roles promise successful applicants will have 'frequent contact' with ministers, business chiefs and cultural bigwigs. They even mention the cash crisis facing Holyrood — admitting it is a 'time of significant financial pressure for the Scottish Government'. Tories economy spokesman Murdo Fraser hit out: 'These cushy gigs are little more than taxpayer-funded platforms to bang the drum for independence abroad while Scotland's public services crumble. 'Scots want action on the state of the roads, NHS backlogs and failing schools — not more nationalist nonsense overseas. 'Hard-pressed Scots will be outraged the SNP is giving lucrative pay packages to pretend diplomats.' The jobs, in Copenhagen, Ottawa and Beijing, boast salaries of £74,480 to £85,964 with 28.9 per cent employer pension contributions boosting packages to around £100,000. Events held by the network of nine international offices include a ceilidh at a Brussels roundabout and a cheese and whisky celebration with the Swiss. External Affairs Secretary Angus Robertson said: 'We will never apologise for overseas offices that help showcase Scotland as a country open for business. "Scotland is consistently ranked best place in the UK outside of London for overseas investment.' Major Scottish Construction Firm Faces Liquidation in Dalgety Bay We previously reported how an independent review of the Scottish disability payment has called for the benefit to be simplified and made more accessible. Applying for the 'compassionate' benefit has been branded as 'soul-destroying' as part of a review commissioned by the Scottish Government. A report said the Scottish Adult Disability Payment (ADP) process was described as 'much kinder' than the UK Personal Independence Payment (PIP). But claimants still found it 'inaccessible, complex and burdensome, causing some clients significant stress and anxiety'. Led by charity leader Edel Harris, the review calls for automatic entitlement to the benefit in some cases. The Conservatives said the system 'is satisfying no one' and the SNP's persistent claim that they can run things better than Westminister 'continue to ring hollow'.

Minister bankrolls Bosnian factory after public grant for Scottish jobs
Minister bankrolls Bosnian factory after public grant for Scottish jobs

Sunday Post

time2 hours ago

  • Sunday Post

Minister bankrolls Bosnian factory after public grant for Scottish jobs

Get a weekly round-up of stories from The Sunday Post: Thank you for signing up to our Sunday Post newsletter. Something went wrong - please try again later. Sign Up SNP minister Ivan McKee's engineering company took taxpayers' money to create jobs in Scotland – then, according to records, lent out £100,000 which helped bankroll an 'ultra-low cost' factory in Bosnia. The millionaire politician has refused to discuss his financial affairs after The Sunday Post exposed his links to engineering plants in the Balkans that are boosting his family's income. Before becoming an MSP, McKee was a director of Greenfold Systems Ltd (GSL) when it was awarded up to £400,000 by Scottish Enterprise in 2013 to fund 65 new jobs in Fife – most of which didn't materialise and the firm received just £35,000. But documents suggest GSL then gave a £100,000 loan to another of his companies, Excel Assemblies Ltd (EAL), which was setting up the factory in the former Yugoslavia. Both firms make hardware for bus constructors – but while EAL's business is booming by paying low wages in the Balkans, Greenfold has just gone bust. It collapsed because iconic Stirlingshire coachbuilder Alexander Dennis Ltd (ADL) lost out on Scottish Government grants, undercut by foreign companies paying workers a pittance. Hundreds of engineering jobs are now at risk as ADL considers shutting its Scottish operations altogether. On Friday, ADL put one of its two factory sites in Falkirk up for sale despite talks continuing to try and save the 400 jobs at risk. McKee quit commerce to become a politician in 2016 and is now public finance minister, in charge of making sure taxpayers' cash is used properly. Meanwhile, though, his wife owns 5% of Excel's [ESL] parent company, to which she has lent money, earning interest payments on it. Records suggest he, too, has an outstanding loan to the firm. McKee has repeatedly ignored questions about their finances. © Alamy Stock Photo Last night critics demanded to know whether Scottish Enterprise grants have ended up creating low-paid jobs abroad. Scottish Conservative shadow employment minister Stephen Kerr said: 'Ivan McKee and the SNP must provide a full and frank explanation. It will be a major scandal if taxpayers' money was spent bankrolling jobs in the Balkans and, to add insult to injury, it led to a Scottish firm going bust and workers being flung on the dole. 'If Ivan McKee had a direct financial interest, it would be even more appalling. SNP ministers warn of the dangers of foreign workers undermining Scottish firms but do nothing to support our domestic industries. 'If, as these claims suggest, their policies actively contribute to that problem while enriching SNP politicians, it's inexcusable.' McKee was one of three businessmen who rescued engineering company Simclar Ltd, renaming it Greenfold Systems. In 2013, quango Scottish Enterprise awarded it up to £400,000 to create new jobs. GSL vowed to increase its workforce from 84 to around 150, but employed just 90 when it went bust. It received £35,000 in 2014, but then 'the company's plans changed', according to a source. Around the same time, McKee and his business partners set up EAL, buying a factory in Croatia. They hatched a plan to create an 'ultra-low cost' new base in Bosnia, which would do roughly the same work as GSL. Excel's 2014/15 accounts state that it received a £100,000 loan from Greenfold Systems – at a time when building the Bosnia plant 'has been a challenging and expensive project'. Since then, the fortunes of the two companies have diverged. GSL plunged into administration last month. Meanwhile, EAL's headcount in Bosnia and Croatia has grown to 742, receiving an average salary of only £9,600 a year. It banked profits of £1.2m last year thanks to new contracts with bus builders. The SNP government's Scottish Zero Emission Bus Challenge Fund (ScotZEB) has offered £120m of grants to operators to buy electric coaches. But bids were marked on criteria that made Scottish jobs and paying decent wages to workers less important than cheap price tags. It means fewer than a third of the buses ordered have been made in Scotland. Last year, ADL accused ministers of creating 'an uneven playing field' favouring 'competitors from lower-cost economies'. McKee has failed to respond when asked if the Balkans factories have profited from ScotZEB grants – while the government says it doesn't know. Ahead of the 2014 referendum, the entrepreneur helped lead lobby group Business For Scotland, which raised £143,000 for the Yes campaign. And GSL's Dunfermline factory hosted photo ops for SNP top brass. Then Finance Secretary John Swinney said on his 2013 visit: 'I am pleased… the Government [and] Scottish Enterprise… are working hard to support manufacturing jobs in Scotland.' McKee was then picked to contest the Glasgow Provan seat for the SNP at the 2016 election and offloaded his business interests. But the day before he became an MSP, his wife Ewa took his vacant seat on the board of Excel Assemblies Holdings Ltd, with shares in her name too. She is also being paid 4% interest a year on an unspecified loan. Scottish Enterprise said it hands over grants retrospectively once criteria have been met. The Scottish Government said: 'Our focus is on securing a future for Alexander Dennis and its workforce. This work is being led by the Deputy First Minister with input from the Cabinet Secretaries for Transport and Finance, as appropriate. Ivan McKee is not involved in any discussions on this issue.' McKee and the SNP were approached for comment. It's understood that GSL created only six new Scottish jobs with the Scottish Enterprise investment.

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