close
PHUKET: In this handout photo taken from the Facebook account, Air India flight AI 379 makes an emergency landing at Phuket International Airport in Phuket on June 13, 2025. An Air India flight from Thailand’s Phuket Island to New Delhi made an emergency landing on June 13 shortly after takeoff because of an on-board bomb threat, the Thai airports authority said. – AFP
PHUKET: In this handout photo taken from the Facebook account, Air India flight AI 379 makes an emergency landing at Phuket International Airport in Phuket on June 13, 2025. An Air India flight from Thailand’s Phuket Island to New Delhi made an emergency landing on June 13 shortly after takeoff because of an on-board bomb threat, the Thai airports authority said. – AFP

Airlines halt many Mideast flights as Zionists hit Iran

Air India diverts, calls back 16 flights • Emirates, Qatar Airways cancel flights

PARIS: Global airlines have cancelled flights to Tel Aviv, Tehran and other Middle East destinations, or rerouted planes, as airspaces were shut off following Zionist strikes on Iran. Zionist entity, Iran, Iraq, Jordan and Syria closed their airspaces after Zionists hit military and nuclear facilities in Iran. Zionist entity said Tehran launched drones in retaliation. Air India’s New Delhi-Vienna and Mumbai-London flights were about to enter Iranian airspace when Zionist entity launched its attack, forcing the planes to turn back to their origin, according to aircraft tracker Flight Aware.

Its London-New Delhi flight had just entered Iranian airspace and was rerouted over Iraq before arriving in India one hour late, according to Flight Aware. Air India diverted or called back a total of 16 flights between India and London and cities in Canada and the United States “due to the emerging situation in Iran”. Emirates, the Middle East’s largest airline, cancelled flights to and from Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and Iran after Zionist entity launched the strikes. Qatar Airways, the country’s national carrier and one of the Middle East’s largest, said it had “temporarily cancelled flights to Iran and Iraq due to (the) current situation in the region”.

Air France said it was suspending its flights to and from Tel Aviv “until further notice” following the closure of Zionist airspace. “Air France is closely monitoring the situation in the Middle East in real time,” a spokesman for the French airline told AFP, adding that “the safety of its customers and crews is its absolute priority”. US carrier Delta Air Lines said it is pausing service between New York’s John F Kennedy airport and Tel Aviv through August 31 “in response to the ongoing conflict in the region.”

United Airlines, another US carrier, said service between its Newark, New Jersey hub and Tel Aviv is paused. United arranged for 26 crew members who are on layover to return to the United States on El Al. One of United’s Tel Aviv flights was canceled Thursday night while the other returned to Newark, the company said. Russia’s aviation authority Rosaviatsiya instructed Russian airlines not to fly “in the airspace of Zionist entity, Jordan, Iraq and Iran” or use airports in Zionist entity and Iran. It said the restrictions will stay in place until June 26 or until further notice.

German airline group Lufthansa suspended flights to and from Tehran until July 31. It also extended the suspension of Tel Aviv flights for the same period. Swiss airline, which is owned by Lufthansa, suspended its Tel Aviv flights until October 25 while those to Beirut were suspended until the end of July. In the United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi airport warned “flight disruptions are expected through today (Friday)” as a result of the Zionist strikes. Dubai’s airport also announced flight delays and cancellations due to the closure of airspaces in Iran, Iraq and Syria. —AFP

Syria holds cherished memories for many Kuwaitis, having once been a favored destination for Gulf families during the 1950s and 1960s. The Levant, with Damascus at its heart, stood as a beacon of culture, history and Arab unity. Its decline under th...
Propaganda is among the most powerful tools used by nations. It influences the masses, provides them with material to feed on, and becomes especially critical during times of war—whether to unify internal ranks or to demoralize the enemy. But toda...
MORE STORIES