06 June 2017

Middle East turns on itself

The BBC has an article about the latest:

Saudi Arabia's aviation authority has formally withdrawn Qatar's license to land and fly in the country. Their General Authority of Civil Aviation also ordered its offices to to be closed within 48 hours. In a statement, the authority also said licenses granted to Qatar Airways' employees would be withdrawn.
Saudi Arabia had already suspended flights to and from Qatar on Monday, amid a diplomatic row between the kingdom and Qatar.
Qatar Airways is wholly owned by the Qatari government. The airline group employs more than forty thousand people worldwide. The chief executive of Qatar Airways, Akbar al-Baker, is also a non-executive director of Heathrow Airport Holdings, which operates London, England's biggest airport.
Saudi Arabia and several other countries have cut ties with Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism in the Gulf region. Other neighbors, including the United Arab Emirates (UAE), have closed their airspace to Qatari planes.
Six countries— Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, Libya's eastern-based government and the Maldives— cut diplomatic ties with Qatar on Monday. Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE have given Qatari nationals two weeks to leave and banned their own citizens from traveling to Qatar.
Doha, Qatar's capital, is a major hub for international flight connections. Other airlines affected by the airspace restrictions include Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways, and Emirates. When avoiding Saudi Arabia, their massive and only neighbor, Qatar's planes are having to take more indirect routes, leading to longer flight times.
Rico says this'll piss off the Qatari's, who're having enough trouble with pronouncing the country's name...

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I don't the reason behind Qatar airways in UK starts providing free tickets to Health Worker without any extra fees.

 

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