Rogue drone forces closure of Dubai airport
Rogue drone forces closure of Dubai airport
An "unauthorised" drone disrupted air traffic at Dubai International Airport, the world's busiest on Saturday for over an hour.
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A rogue drone disrupted air traffic at Dubai International Airport for more than an hour on Saturday, said the operator of one of the world's busiest aviation hubs.
"DXB airspace was closed due to unauthorised UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) activity for 69 minutes resulting in a number of diversions," Dubai Airports said in a statement on its Twitter account, using the airport code.
"Airspace reopened at 12:45 (0845 GMT)" on Saturday, it added.
As a result, some flights were delayed for four hours and four flights were diverted, the 7Days newspaper reported.
It was the second such incident in 18 months, according to media reports in the United Arab Emirates.
The use of drones is banned within the boundary of the airport, with those found guilty of flying the pilotless aircraft there facing heavy fines.
Situated on transcontinental air routes, Dubai is one of several Gulf-based airports to experience prodigious growth in recent years.
Around 100 airlines fly to more than 240 destinations from the hub, which is also home to carrier Emirates.
"DXB airspace was closed due to unauthorised UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) activity for 69 minutes resulting in a number of diversions," Dubai Airports said in a statement on its Twitter account, using the airport code.
"Airspace reopened at 12:45 (0845 GMT)" on Saturday, it added.
As a result, some flights were delayed for four hours and four flights were diverted, the 7Days newspaper reported.
It was the second such incident in 18 months, according to media reports in the United Arab Emirates.
The use of drones is banned within the boundary of the airport, with those found guilty of flying the pilotless aircraft there facing heavy fines.
Situated on transcontinental air routes, Dubai is one of several Gulf-based airports to experience prodigious growth in recent years.
Around 100 airlines fly to more than 240 destinations from the hub, which is also home to carrier Emirates.