Damascus Airport to resume international flights starting Jan. 7

This picture shows the entrance to the Damascus International Airport on December 31, 2024. (File/AFP)
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Updated 04 January 2025
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Damascus Airport to resume international flights starting Jan. 7

  • International aid planes and foreign diplomatic delegations have already been landing in Syria

DAMASCUS: Syria said on Saturday the country’s main airport in Damascus would resume international flights starting next week after such commercial trips were halted following last month’s ouster of president Bashar Assad.

“We announce we will start receiving international flights to and from Damascus International Airport from” Tuesday, state news agency SANA said, quoting Ashhad Al-Salibi, who heads the General Authority of Civil Aviation and Air Transport.

“We reassure Arab and international airlines that we have begun the phase of rehabilitating the Aleppo and Damascus airports with our partners’ help, so that they can welcome flights from all over the world,” he said.

International aid planes and foreign diplomatic delegations have already been landing in Syria. Domestic flights have also resumed.

On Thursday, Qatar Airways announced it will resume flights to the Syrian capital after nearly 13 years, starting with three weekly flights on Tuesday.

A Qatari official told AFP last month that Doha had offered the new Syrian authorities help in resuming operations at Damascus airport.

On December 18, the first flight since Islamist-led rebels ousted Assad on December 8 took off from Damascus airport to Aleppo in the country’s north, AFP journalists saw.


Turkiye’s Erdogan tells UK’s Starmer more can be done for dialogue on Iran

Updated 07 March 2026
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Turkiye’s Erdogan tells UK’s Starmer more can be done for dialogue on Iran

  • Prolonged interventions could cause great damage to regional and global stability

ISTANBUL: Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan told British Prime Minister Keir Starmer by phone that there are still things that can be done ⁠to build a ⁠ground for dialogue on Iran, and that Turkiye’s peace-focused efforts ⁠are ongoing.
The Turkish presidency statement on Saturday cited Erdogan as saying that Turkiye was monitoring the process that began with the attacks on Iran, ⁠and ⁠that prolonged interventions could cause great damage to regional and global stability.