Gulf airlines launch limited relief flights as Middle East airspace closures strand passengers

Qatar Airways has announced flights will depart from Muscat, Oman, to six European destinations. Getty
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Updated 05 March 2026
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Gulf airlines launch limited relief flights as Middle East airspace closures strand passengers

RIYADH: Qatar Airways and Emirates said they will operate limited relief flights from March 5 to assist stranded passengers after US-Israeli strikes on Iran triggered widespread airspace closures and disrupted global travel.

Qatar Airways announced that its flights will depart from Muscat, Oman, to six European destinations, including London, Berlin, and Rome, as well as from Riyadh to Frankfurt.

These would be the airline’s first flights since Feb. 28, when its Doha hub was shut after the strikes on Iran, according to airline service Flightradar24.

Emirates said that it will operate the flights from March 5 until 11:59 p.m. UAE time on March 7, as a result of the current conditions prevailing in the region.

“We are accommodating customers with earlier bookings as a priority on these limited flights. Customers transiting in Dubai will only be accepted for travel if their connecting flight is operating,” the organization said.

The airline continued to advise passengers not to go to the airport unless they have been notified directly by Emirates or hold a confirmed booking for these flights. ​

“Emirates continues to monitor the situation, and we will develop our operational schedule accordingly,” the airline added.

As of the morning of March 5th, Emirates flights had departed from Dubai to destinations including Sydney, Paris, and Amsterdam, as well as Toronto and Mumbai, Flightradar24 data showed, though the vast majority of services remained canceled.

Emirates later said more than 100 flights would depart from and return to Dubai on March 5 and 6.

|“These flights will carry people eager to reach their final destinations, as well as essential cargo like perishables and pharmaceuticals,” the airline said.

“Emirates will continue to gradually build back its flying schedule, subject to airspace availability and all operational requirements being met,” it added.

All Etihad Airways’ scheduled commercial flights to and from Abu Dhabi remain suspended until 6:00 a.m. UAE time on March 6.

“In coordination with UAE authorities and subject to strict operational and safety approvals, a limited number of repositioning, cargo and repatriation flights are operating,” the airline said in a statement.

The closures disrupted key hub airports in Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Doha. Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad, which operate from these hubs, normally handle around 90,000 passengers daily, with even more traveling to other Middle Eastern destinations, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium.

Airline shares rebound as trickle of Middle East flights resume

Airline shares rebounded on March 5 as more flights took off from the Middle East, providing some reprieve for carriers after US-Israeli strikes on Iran wiped billions of dollars off their market value earlier in the week, Reuters reported.

Governments have been scrambling to arrange flights out of the Middle East for tens of thousands of citizens stranded by the intensifying conflict, which has closed most of the region’s airspace due to the risk of missiles hitting passenger planes.

Asian airlines shares rebound

Jet fuel prices have soared globally since the strikes on Iran, with the Singapore rate hitting an all-time high on concerns of supply disruption, S&P Global Platts said.

Nevertheless, many Asian airline shares rebounded after double-digit losses in recent days amid uncertainty over the conflict’s duration and rising oil prices.

“For now, I consider this rebound to be primarily short-term in nature, and its sustainability will still depend on the ongoing situation in the Iranian conflict,” said Kenny Ng, a securities strategist at China Everbright Securities International.

Shares in Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific Airways rose 4 percent, Japan Airlines was up 0.25 percent, Qantas Airways closed 1 percent higher and Korean Air Lines jumped more than 6 percent.

Major Chinese carriers, including Air China, China Eastern Airlines, and China Southern Airlines, fell between 1 percent and 3 percent in both the Hong Kong and Shanghai markets, stabilizing after steeper falls earlier this week.

“Asian airlines are highly sensitive to Iran’s situation due to exposure through routes and energy in both revenue and costs. Any news on shortening the duration of the war can easily turn sentiment,” said Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis.

With airspace severely constrained, airlines have been forced to reroute flights, carry extra fuel, or make additional refueling stops to guard against sudden diversions or longer flight paths through safer corridors.

In addition to upending travel, the escalating Middle East conflict has also reduced the world’s air cargo capacity by more than one-fifth and pushed up freight rates.


Experts clash over effect of war on oil supply

Updated 19 sec ago
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Experts clash over effect of war on oil supply

  • International energy chief dismisses crisis fears * But Qatari minister warns exports could halt ‘in weeks’

BRUSSELS: International Energy Agency chief Fatih Birol on Friday dismissed fears of a global oil crisis, and said there was “plenty of oil in the market.”
But he was contradicted by Qatar’s Energy Minister Saad Al-Kaabi, who said Gulf oil producers could halt exports within weeks because of the US-Israel-Iran war, sending crude prices to $150 a barrel.

The war on Iran and Tehran’s retaliatory attacks across the Gulf have already sent crude prices soaring by about 20 percent, fanning fears of a fresh spike in inflation that could hit the global economy. Shipping through the critical Strait of Hormuz has all but dried up.
US President Donald Trump has pledged to protect ships passing through and promised further action to “reduce pressure on oil,” but prices have remained elevated. Brent crude, the global benchmark, was up 2.77 percent on Friday to nearly $88 a barrel.

However, Birol said: “There is plenty of oil, we have no oil shortage. There is a huge surplus in the market. We are facing a temporary disruption, a logistical disruption.”

Nevertheless, Al-Kaabi insisted there would be pressure on oil supplies “in two to three weeks” if tankers were unable to pass through the Strait.

“Everybody that has ​not called for force majeure we expect ⁠will do so in the next ​few days that this continues. All exporters in ​the Gulf region will have to call force majeure,” he said. “Everybody's energy price is going to go higher. There will be shortages of ​some products and there will be a chain reaction of factories that cannot supply.”

Qatar halted its liquefied natural gas production on March 2, as Iranian retaliation for US and Israeli strikes continued to target Gulf countries.