UAE says civilian flight paths will not change after fighter jet incident

  • 3/28/2018
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DUBAI: The United Arab Emirates will not change its civilian flight paths, the chairman of its General Civil Aviation Authority said on Tuesday, a day after the UAE accused Qatari fighter jets of flying dangerously close to two of its civilian planes. Asked if any changes would be made to civilian routes, Sultan bin Saeed Al-Mansouri said: “We have no plans at the present time.” The UAE called the incident — which Qatar denied — a “provocative action,” and said it had already reported two similar events to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the United Nations’ aviation agency. Speaking on the sidelines of a conference in Dubai, Mansouri said the UAE would now complain to the ICAO again. Authorities in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates are again accusing Qatari military jets of interfering with their flights, amid the Arab countries’ boycott of the Gulf nation. Qatar, which has complained about Emirati military aircraft violating its airspace, denied the UAE’s claims. Officials in Doha declined to comment on Tuesday when reached. Bahrain’s state-run news agency said late Monday that Qatari fighter jets passed underneath an Emirati plane with a tail number corresponding to an aircraft flown by the ruling family of Fujairah, one of the UAE’s seven emirates. The report said the incident took place over international waters near Bahrain, an island kingdom off the coast of Saudi Arabia. “The two fighters flew deliberately under a UAE Airbus 320 ... en route from Fujairah to Rome, prompting Bahrain’s Air Surveillance to intervene and take the necessary measures to ensure aviation safety,” the report said. “The Emirati A320 jet then flew at a higher altitude of 35,000 feet to avoid the Qatari fighters, which consistently violate international conventions and jeopardize the movement of civil aviation in the region,” it added. Data from FlightRadar24, a flight-tracking website, shows that an Airbus A320 associated with Fujairah’s ruling family flew Monday en route to Rome and did climb above its 35,000-foot cruising altitude near Bahrain. However, that data did not offer an explanation for the gain in altitude. It wasn’t clear who was on board the flight. Authorities in Fujairah, on the UAE’s eastern coast, and Bahrain did not respond to requests for comment Tuesday. Separately, the UAE’s civil aviation authority issued a statement alleging that “two Qatari fighter jets dangerously approached two UAE-registered commercial airplanes while flying” in Bahrain’s airspace. It wasn’t clear if one of those craft was the Fujairah to Rome flight, as the statement did not identify the aircraft involved. Emirates, the Dubai-based long-haul carrier, and Abu Dhabi-based Etihad declined to comment. FlyDubai, a low-cost airline, said its planes weren’t involved. Sharjah-based Air Arabia did not respond to requests for comment. Local media in the UAE, citing a GCAA employee, identified the Emirati aircraft involved in the incidents as a helicopter and a passenger plane. The state-run Qatar News Agency issued a statement from civil aviation authorities late Monday denying the Emirati claims and calling it an attempt to cover up previous violations of Qatari airspace. Qatar accused Emirati military jets of violating its air space in December and January in two incidents, filing its own complaint to the UN The UAE denied the allegations. Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE cut off Qatar’s land, sea and air routes on June 5 over its alleged support of extremists and close ties with Iran. The diplomatic crisis has hurt Qatar Airways, Doha’s long-haul carrier that competes with Emirates and Etihad. Qatar had complained to the Montreal-based International Civil Aviation Organization about the boycotting nations cutting off its air routes, forcing the carrier to take longer flights through Iran and Turkey. Its regional feeder flights in Saudi Arabia and the UAE also have been cut off. Widening the Gulf dispute to include civilian aviation and airspace could hurt Emirati airlines already stung by President Donald Trump’s travel bans, as well as last year’s ban on laptops in airplane cabins, which has been lifted. Dubai is home to the world’s busiest airport for international travel.

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