India Reroutes Flights Amid Middle East Tensions, Aids Stranded Passengers

India's Civil Aviation Ministry is closely monitoring the Middle East airspace situation following recent military strikes. Indian carriers have adjusted schedules and are resuming long-haul operations using alternative routings to avoid restricted zones. Special measures, including additional flights from Jeddah, are being coordinated to repatriate stranded passengers and restore operational stability. The ministry emphasizes passenger safety and transparent communication from airlines during the disruption.

Key Points: India Adjusts Flight Paths After Middle East Airspace Disruption

  • Flights rerouted via alternative airspace
  • Special relief flights from Jeddah planned
  • Coordination with foreign authorities ongoing
  • Passenger advisories issued for updates
3 min read

India monitors Middle East airspace, adjusts flight schedules for passenger safety

India monitors Middle East airspace, resumes flights via new routes after US-Israel strikes on Iran. Airlines arrange special flights for stranded passengers.

"Passenger safety remains paramount. - Ministry of Civil Aviation"

New Delhi, March 3

India is closely monitoring the evolving airspace situation in parts of the Middle East and its impact on international flight operations following the US-Israel attack against Iran.

According to the Ministry of Civil Aviation, Indian carriers have undertaken calibrated adjustments to their schedules, with long-haul and ultra-long-haul operations being progressively resumed through alternative routings that avoid restricted airspace.

Aircraft and crew repositioning measures are underway to restore operational stability at the earliest.

Special arrangements are being made to facilitate the movement of stranded passengers. Airlines are deploying additional capacity where required and coordinating closely with foreign aviation authorities and Indian missions abroad to ensure safe and orderly passenger movement.

IndiGo has planned 10 special relief operations from Jeddah to India on March 3, to facilitate the return of stranded passengers, subject to required approvals and prevailing airspace conditions.

IndiGo is coordinating with the Consulate General of India at Jeddah for passenger facilitation.

Foreign carriers operating between India and the Gulf region are also undertaking limited operations, subject to operational and airspace considerations, a release said on Monday.

Passenger safety remains paramount. All airlines have been advised to maintain transparent communication with passengers and ensure adherence to regulatory requirements concerning refunds, rescheduling, and passenger assistance.

Passengers are advised to check the latest flight status directly with their respective airlines before proceeding to the airport and to rely only on official sources for updates.

The situation was reviewed today in a high-level meeting chaired by Minister of Civil Aviation Rammohan Naidu and attended by Civil Aviation Secretary Samir Kumar Sinha and all senior officials.

As per the release, the Ministry remains in continuous coordination with airlines, airport operators, regulatory authorities, and the Ministry of External Affairs to ensure safe operations, orderly restoration of services, and facilitation of affected passengers.

This came against the backdrop of coordinated US and Israeli airstrikes across multiple Iranian cities on February 28, targeting military command centres, air-defence systems, missile sites, and key regime infrastructure. These strikes resulted in the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and four senior military and security officials, with large explosions reported in Tehran and other major cities.

In response, Iran retaliated by launching ballistic missiles and drones at US assets and allies across the region, including Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Jordan, further widening the conflict in the Middle East and heightening risks for civilians and expatriates alike.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
My brother is stuck in Dubai. The communication from his airline has been terrible. Glad to see the Ministry is advising transparency, but airlines need to actually follow it. The stress for families is immense.
A
Aman W
This is why we need strong, independent foreign policy. Getting caught in the crossfire of other nations' conflicts impacts our economy and our people working in the Gulf. Jai Hind.
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Sarah B
Coordinating with the Indian consulate is crucial. Well done to the authorities for the swift action. The alternative routings will increase fuel costs and time, but safety comes first.
K
Karthik V
Praying for the safe return of all Indian nationals. The Gulf region has so many of our brothers and sisters working hard for their families. Hope the situation de-escalates soon.
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Varun X
The airlines must ensure they don't charge exorbitant prices for rescheduling or new tickets during this crisis. The ministry's note on regulatory requirements for refunds is important.

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