UAE aviation authority urges airlines to take measures amid regional tensions

General Civil Aviation Authority
says carriers need to avoid operating in areas 'that could jeopardise civil
aviation safety and operations'
The General Civil Aviation Authority
(GCAA) has called on air operators in the UAE to evaluate flight paths affected
by recent airspace restrictions in the region.
In a statement carried by state news
agency WAM, the GCAA said that given current regional developments and as a
precautionary measure, UAE-registered air operators need to avoid operating in
areas "that could jeopardise civil aviation safety and operations".
The GCAA's comments comes as
Emirates Airline and Etihad Airways said Friday they have rerouted flights, a
day after Iran shot down a US reconnaissance drone over the Strait of Hormuz.
Some of the world's leading
carriers, including British Airways, Qantas and Singapore Airlines, suspended
flights over the strategic waterway amid escalating tensions between Washington
and Tehran.
"In light of the current
situation, Emirates has taken precautionary measures including rerouting all
flights away from areas of possible conflict," a spokesperson for the
Dubai-based airline said.
"We are carefully monitoring
the ongoing developments and are in close contact with the relevant government
authorities with regards to our flight operations, and will make further
operational changes if the need arises."
The suspensions came after the
Federal Aviation Administration in the United States issued a Notice to Airmen
(NOTAM) "prohibiting US-registered aircraft from operating over the Gulf
and Gulf of Oman".
Abu Dhabi-based Etihad Airways said
following the NOTAM it had "agreed to change a number of the flight paths
we operate to and from the Arabian Gulf."
Meanwhile, Dubai's low-cost carrier
flydubai said it "adjusted some of the existing flight paths in the region
as a precautionary measure".
The NOTAM was in response to
"heightened military activities and increased political tensions that
might place commercial flights at risk", an FAA statement said, as Tehran
and Washington engaged in a war of words over Thursday's missile strike on the
drone.
Iran's downing of the drone -- which
Washington insists was above international waters but Iran says was within its
airspace -- has seen tensions between the two countries spike further after a
series of attacks on tankers blamed by the US on Tehran.