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Doha airport chaos: Thousands of passengers stuck at the airport and long queues in Dubai

The operations at the two busiest airports on the planet, Doha and Dubai, slowed down to a crawl Tuesday. Thousands of passengers faced long delays and cancellations due to the temporary closure of the airspace the day before.

Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait closed their airspace on Monday night after Iran struck a U.S. base in Doha, the capital of Qatar. This forced airlines to cancel hundreds of flights or reroute them, creating a queue of passengers stranded.

Dubai airports in the United Arab Emirates temporarily halted their operations.

U.S. president Donald Trump announced that a ceasefire had been reached between Israel and Iran and asked for both sides to respect it. This raised hopes of a peaceful end to the 12-day conflict, but violence continued with reports of deadly attacks in both countries.

"I haven’t slept in 19 hours." "I've been standing in this queue for nine hours," said Lily Rogers (21), who was waiting in a 200 metre (656 foot) long line at Doha's Hamad International Airport.

The psychology student was on her way to Southeast Asia for a holiday. She said that those waiting in line received only water.

Virgin Australia estimates that more than 25,000 passengers are stranded in Doha Airport.

According to a witness, the lines were so long some passengers had to jump queues. This led them into arguments.

FlightRadar24, a flight tracking website, reports that around 250 flights at Hamad Airport were cancelled, and another 238 were delayed.

FlightRadar24 showed that long queues also formed at Dubai International Airport, the busiest in the world. There, 145 flights had been cancelled and more than 450 were delayed.

Qatar Airways announced that it is "making progress" in restoring the schedule, with possible disruptions up until June 26.

Dubai Airports, as well as the Dubai Government Media Office, were not available to comment immediately.

BUSY HUB

Middle East airports are among the busiest on the planet. They cover an area that stretches from Iran and Iraq all the way to the Mediterranean, and serve as a hub for connecting flights between Europe and Asia.

Since the beginning of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine airlines have been forced to avoid the airspace above both countries.

Dubai transported over 92.3 million passengers in the last year. The average daily passenger count was more than 25,000.

Airline companies from British Airways to Lufthansa have already stopped flights to Middle East destinations because of airspace closures and safety concerns following Israel's strike against Iran on 13 June.

Many airlines have cut flights to Dubai and other hubs that are usually resilient, following the U.S. attack on Iran.

According to independent aviation analyst Brendan Sobie, based in Asia, the restrictions and closures had ripple effects throughout the region as most passengers transit through Hamad Airport on their way to other destinations.

Airport data shows that only 22% of passengers who travel through the airport in 2024 have Qatar as their destination.

Air India has suspended all flights between the Indian Subcontinent and destinations such as the U.S. East Coast and Canada.

Analysts say that this poses a problem for Indian carriers, as they don't have access to Pakistani skies. After a short military conflict, the two neighbours in April blocked each other's access to airspace.

Air India announced on Tuesday that it would resume these flights as soon the airspaces are reopened, while other airlines such as flydubai warned of delays due to congestion in airspace.

It's frustrating," said Julien Moutte. The Paris bound passenger had been stuck in Doha's terminal for 15 hours. Reporting by Luke Tyson, Amr Alfiky and Mark Bendeich from Dubai and Doha; Additional reporting by Allison Lampert from Montreal; Writing and editing by Joseph Mason and Bernadettebaum.

(source: Reuters)