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PARIS:
Governments and airlines are sending special flights to rescue tens of thousands of travellers stranded in the Middle East war even as some carriers on Tuesday tentatively resumed flights.
The situation remains dangerous in the region, with Qatar saying it had blocked Iranian attacks on its airport, one of the major hubs in the region.
The US and Israeli attacks on Iran which began on Saturday, followed by Iranian counterattacks on Gulf states and Israel, have prompted several countries to shut their airspace.
At least 12,903 flights were cancelled between Saturday and Monday, representing 40 percent of planned flights, according to aviation data analysis firm Cirium.
Cirium estimates that flights in the region account for around 900,000 seats each day, so the number of affected travellers could already be more than one million.
Slow resumption
On Sunday, nearly all flights were cancelled out of the United Arab Emirates, home to Dubai airport, the second-largest in the world in terms of passengers.
The cancellation rate fell to 93.5 percent on Monday after Dubai — and Abu Dhabi’s airport — resumed limited operations.
Several Emirates flights took off Tuesday morning, according to the Flightradar24 flight tracking website. The aircraft immediately flew south out of the Gulf region.
Only some flights by Emirates, low-cost flydubai and Russia’s Aeroflot were operating.
Numerous Royal Jordanian flights took off and landed at Amman airport, but flew via the south of the country to avoid Israeli airspace.
Flights continue to come in and out of Saudi Arabia and Oman, and their airspace is being used by long-haul flights between Europe and Asia.
No civilian flights passed through airspace above Iraq, Israel, Kuwait, Libya or Qatar, however.
Evacuation flights planned
Several countries have organised evacuation flights to repatriate their nationals.
Two evacuation flights with 200 passengers each landed in the Czech capital Prague on Tuesday morning.
“We are preparing to charter flights so that the most vulnerable people… can benefit,” said French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot.