Flight time between Middle East and Seychelles increases due to closure of Yemeni airspace
Flights between Seychelles and the Middle East are currently taking a
longer route to reach their destinations, due to closure of Yemeni
airspace. The Yemen Civil Aviation Authority made the decision to close
their airspace yesterday as a precaution to commercial aviation, after
military activities erupted in the region of Aden in Yemen.
Airlines are, therefore, making a detour to avoid the Sanaa airspace and are being dispatched out in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean using Muscat and Bombay airspace. This is affecting both the Emirates and Air Seychelles/Etihad flight schedules.
In the case of Emirates airline, the flying time has increased by approximately 45 minutes, from 4 hours, 5 minutes to 4 hours, 45 minutes.
Air Seychelles/Etihad has slightly over an hour added to the flight times for the Seychelles-Abu Dhabi sector and vice versa.
Other than those traveling to Seychelles, hundreds of flights using the Yemen airspace to access the Indian Ocean region as well as large parts of Africa en route from the Gulf area, and services to and from Europe transiting in the Yemeni airspace, are being affected.
Ms. Esmee Samson, the General Manager for Air Navigation Services at the SCAA, said: “Yesterday, we also had overflying traffic from Europe to the Indian Ocean Islands which were routing mostly in the Nairobi airspace but has as of today resumed their normal routing in the Seychelles airspace with their detour being further north.”
Seychelles, as a contracted state of International Civil Aviation Authority (ICAO), has welcomed this cautious approach although this situation will bring about considerable additional costs and slightly longer flight times.
The Minister for Foreign Affairs and Transport, Mr. Joel Morgan, said:
“Safety, security, and passenger rights have to be safeguarded at all costs always. Passengers traveling to our region can rest assured that as a government as a contracting state of ICAO we will always err on the side of caution and support actions from other authorities who are doing just that.”
It is for the moment unclear for how long this situation will be on-going, but the SCAA is monitoring the situation very closely as well as the ICAO Eastern and Southern African Office in Nairobi.
http://www.eturbonews.com/57002/flight-time-between-middle-east-and-seychelles-increases-due-clo
Airlines are, therefore, making a detour to avoid the Sanaa airspace and are being dispatched out in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean using Muscat and Bombay airspace. This is affecting both the Emirates and Air Seychelles/Etihad flight schedules.
In the case of Emirates airline, the flying time has increased by approximately 45 minutes, from 4 hours, 5 minutes to 4 hours, 45 minutes.
Air Seychelles/Etihad has slightly over an hour added to the flight times for the Seychelles-Abu Dhabi sector and vice versa.
Other than those traveling to Seychelles, hundreds of flights using the Yemen airspace to access the Indian Ocean region as well as large parts of Africa en route from the Gulf area, and services to and from Europe transiting in the Yemeni airspace, are being affected.
Ms. Esmee Samson, the General Manager for Air Navigation Services at the SCAA, said: “Yesterday, we also had overflying traffic from Europe to the Indian Ocean Islands which were routing mostly in the Nairobi airspace but has as of today resumed their normal routing in the Seychelles airspace with their detour being further north.”
Seychelles, as a contracted state of International Civil Aviation Authority (ICAO), has welcomed this cautious approach although this situation will bring about considerable additional costs and slightly longer flight times.
The Minister for Foreign Affairs and Transport, Mr. Joel Morgan, said:
“Safety, security, and passenger rights have to be safeguarded at all costs always. Passengers traveling to our region can rest assured that as a government as a contracting state of ICAO we will always err on the side of caution and support actions from other authorities who are doing just that.”
It is for the moment unclear for how long this situation will be on-going, but the SCAA is monitoring the situation very closely as well as the ICAO Eastern and Southern African Office in Nairobi.
http://www.eturbonews.com/57002/flight-time-between-middle-east-and-seychelles-increases-due-clo
aTHEISTS aT pL .HAVE DECIDED THAT A OFRIEGNER HAS A RIGHT TO BE BURIED ON OUR SOIL .THOUGH HE OR SHE HAS NOTHING IN REALTION ...BE IT FSEYCHELLOIS FAMILY MEMBERS ETC....Seychellois OPSE THE BURIAL OF uNGANDAN pIREST ON SEYCHELLES SOIL-------a UNGAANDAN OR ELSE SHOULD BE BURIED IN THEIR HOMELAND BY THEIR FAMILY MEMBERS NOT ON A LAND THAT IS NOTZ THIER.
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