Condor (DE, Frankfurt International) and sister carriers Thomas Cook Airlines Belgium (Brussels National) and Thomas Cook Airlines UK (Manchester International) will be managed as a group of airlines by the same management team from March 1 onwards. All of the carriers are controlled by tour operator Thomas Cook and will be managed by Group Head of Air Travel Christoph Debus and Condor CEO Ralf Teckentrup. The airlines will continue to operate as separate entities with own air operator certificates but will use the same IT infrastructure as well as procurement and sales processes. Condor has already started selling all Thomas Cook Airlines Belgium flights under its DE code in global distribution systems and plans to codeshare on some selected Thomas Cook Airlines UK routes between the UK and Las Vegas Harry Reid and Orlando Sanford. While Thomas Cook Airlines Scandinavia (Copenhagen Kastrup) will continue to operate as a separate airline with its own management team, Condor Berlin (Berlin Schönefeld) will be merged into Condor later this spring as soon as Thomas Cook has been able to reach agreement with labor unions on the proposed merger. The Scandinavian subsidiary has been left out for the time being as it only operates on behalf of tour operators and does not sell directly to the public. Condor currently operates 13 B757-300s and 12 B767-300ERs, Condor Berlin has a fleet of 12 A320-200s and one A321-200, Thomas Cook Airlines Belgium operates one A319-100 and four A320-200s while Thomas Cook Airlines UK has five A320-200s, four A321-200s, 15 B757-200s, 2 B757-300s, five B767-300ERs and three A330-200s.