Germany gave Etihad Airways a final deadline to end code-sharing on 31 routes with Air Berlin Plc, saying that the Emirati carrier must find an alternative solution for the connections by Jan. 15. The decision comes after a court in Braunschweig gave Etihad up until Nov. 8 to end the code-share agreement. Germany’s transport ministry said Friday it extended the decision further to avoid “inconveniencing any passengers who have already bought tickets on the affected routes.” Etihad is in the middle of a dispute on aviation rights between Germany and the United Arab Emirates. Passengers of both airlines have already booked 82,000 trips on the routes affected, Etihad said. Air Berlin spokesman Uwe Kattwinkel declined to comment. (By Richard Weiss, Karin Matussek and Alex Webb/Bloomberg)

World Bank approves $1.1 billion emergency financing for Bangladesh
Abu Dhabi partners with Boehringer Ingelheim to advance precision medicine
H.H. Sheikh Ahmed approves launch of business media platform
Saudi Aramco resumes oil loading at Ras Tanura after 4-month halt
Summer Davos ends with call to boost innovation and growth
