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Qatar Airways CEO: All passengers diverted from flights will be rebooked on new flights in 24 hours.

Qatar Airways announced on Wednesday that it had rebooked all 20,000 passengers on flights diverted Monday night because Iran fired missiles at a U.S. base in the Gulf Country.

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A missile attack was launched on Al Udeid Air Base, Doha, after the U.S. joined Israel in its attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities. This was a threat to escalate tensions in the region before an announcement of a ceasefire by Israel and Iran.

Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain were forced to temporarily close their airspace while Dubai's airports in the United Arab Emirates also briefly stopped operations.

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Backlog

Thousands of passengers queued up for hours at Doha's Hamad International Airport, with long delays and cancellations.

In an open letter published on X, Qatar Airways CEO Badr Mohammad Al-Meer stated that "all passengers from diverted flight -- about 20,000 total -- have been cleared within 24 hour." "More that 11,000 passengers resumed their travels in the morning on the 24th, and the rest left through the evening wave or morning bank on the 25th. There are no stranded passengers on diverted flights as of today.

According to a eyewitness, the traffic at the airport was normal on Wednesday with minimal delays.

Al-Meer stated that over 90 Qatar Airways flights headed to Doha were "forced to divert instantly" at the time of attack. More than 10,000 passengers had already been in transit through Doha's Airport.

In response to the chaos following the attacks, the airline activated its Business Continuity Plans, increasing capacity at destinations that had a high volume of displaced passengers. Federico Maccioni, Andrew Mills, Jaidaa Ahmed and Mark Heinrich contributed to the reporting; Leslie Adler and Mark Heinrich edited.

(source: Reuters)