UAE Airlines Resume Flights to Iran as Airspace Reopens
- Iran resumed flights to Bandar Abbas, Mashhad, and Tehran on July 4 after reopening its airspace following a 12-day conflict with Israel.
- The airspace closure began on June 13 after Israeli airstrikes targeted Tehran and other Iranian sites, escalating the conflict into aerial hostilities.
- Following a US-brokered ceasefire on June 24, Iran reopened most airports except Isfahan and Tabriz, which require further infrastructure work before resuming flights.
- Flydubai resumed full operations on Friday, and EPAEmirates plans to restart flights on July 10 after a 20-day suspension caused by the conflict and airspace restrictions.
- The reopening marks a step toward normalizing regional air travel, with Iran operating flights from 5 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily amid continued cautious security assessments.
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Iran reopens airspace; international flights resume after 20-day halt — 'new phase of stability'
Iran's Imam Khomeini International Airport has reopened its skies to international flights after a 20-day halt due to conflict with Israel. The first flight from Flydubai landed at the airport on Wednesday after extensive security and diplomatic coordination.
·New Delhi, India
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UAE airlines resume flights to Iran as airspace reopens
Flydubai says it has restored full services to Bandar Abbas, Mashhad and Tehran
·Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
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Iran reopens airspace, resumes flights
Isfahan and Tabriz airports remain temporarily closed - Anadolu Ajansı
·Ankara, Türkiye
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Total News Sources11
Leaning Left1Leaning Right4Center2Last UpdatedBias Distribution57% Right
Bias Distribution
- 57% of the sources lean Right
57% Right
14%
C 29%
R 57%
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