Etihad and other Airways suspends operations through Iran's Hormuz, Gulf of Oman airspace

International airlines have started
to alter course around Iranian airspace following the shooting down of a US
military drone in the Gulf.
British Airways, Qantas, Lufthansa
and KLM were among the carriers that said they were choosing to reroute
flights, after the US Federal Aviation Administration issued a warning and
blocked US-registered aircraft from flying over Iranian waters in the strait of
Hormuz and the Gulf of Oman.
The FAA’s emergency “notice to
airmen” – notam – warned of a “potential for miscalculation or
misidentification” in the area, a heavily used corridor for global flights,
including from the US and Europe through the Middle East to India and
Australia.
On Thursday, an Iranian
surface-to-air missile shot down a US Global Hawk drone, a $130m (£102m)
unmanned aircraft the size of a commercial passenger jet. The FAA said there
were passenger planes in the air 45 miles away when the strike occurred.
The US carrier United Airlines has
suspended flights between Newark airport near New York and Mumbai due to safety
fears.
BA said it was adhering to the FAA
guidance to avoid the area but flights continued to operate as normal, using
alternative routes. “Our safety and security team are constantly liaising with
authorities around the world as part of their comprehensive risk assessment
into every route we operate,” a spokeswoman said.
Qantas said it would reroute its
Australia-London flights, while the German carrier Lufthansa and KLM of the
Netherlands said they would avoid the strait – although Lufthansa will continue
flights to Tehran.
Dutch nationals made up the majority
of the 298 people killed when Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down over
Ukraine in 2014.
Opsgroup, which provides intelligence
to airlines, said “the threat of a civil aircraft shootdown in southern Iran is
real”. It said the Iranian weapon that attacked the US drone was comparable to
the Russian Buk system that shot down the Malaysian plane.
According to Associated Press, the
FAA notam is the second this year to suggest Iranian weapons could fire on an
airliner in error, a possibility Tehran has dismissed, although in 1988, a US
navy warship said it mistook an Iranian passenger plane in the Gulf for a
fighter, shooting it down and killing 290 people.
Qatar Airways had yet to respond to
requests for comment, but flights appeared to be continuing to fly through
Iranian airspace, including the strait of Hormuz. The airline, which codeshares
with BA on many flights, has been barred from the skies of Gulf neighbours
including Saudi Arabia since 2017, forcing it north on many flights.
Emirates, based in Dubai, has the
closest major hub to the affected area. The airline said it was taking
precautionary measures including rerouting all flights away from areas of
possible conflict, but the disruption had “minimally affected” the timings of
flights.
“We are carefully monitoring the
ongoing developments and are in close contact with the relevant government
authorities with regards to our flight operations,” a spokesman said.
Etihad, based in Abu Dhabi, said it
had contingency plans in place. The carrier said it would decide if any action
was required after “carefully evaluating” the FAA directive.
Diversions could mean further costs
for Gulf long-haul airlines, the operations of which have been subject to years
of intense lobbying by US carriers over perceived unfair competition. The Gulf
airlines have been affected by Donald Trump’s travel bans targeting
predominantly Muslim countries, and prohibitions on laptops in cabins.