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Egyptian Gazette
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Phantom flights: Iran war creates 9,100-km trips to nowhere

by News Wires
March 18, 2026
in World
Phantom flights: Iran war creates 9,100-km trips to nowhere 1 - Egyptian Gazette
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As Emirates flight EK10 from London cruised over Saudi Arabia on Monday, news broke of a drone strike at its destination, Dubai. The aircraft turned back to Gatwick, flight ‌data show, completing a 9,100 km (6,150 miles) round trip – one of dozens of “flights to nowhere” triggered by the Middle East war.

Roughly 30 Emirates flights heading to Dubai International were also ordered back or rerouted after Iranian drone attacks temporarily shut what is normally the world’s busiest airport for international passengers.

Passengers expecting a dawn landing in the glitzy United Arab Emirates port city were stunned.

“Was supposed to wake up on approach to Dubai,” said one social media user posting a map ⁠of his flight, EK164, turning around near Cairo and heading back to Dublin.

The surprise U-turns – quickly dubbed “flights to nowhere” on social media — have become one of the most visible quirks of flying since the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran began on February 28, joining soaring fuel costs, stranded travellers and rewritten routes on the list of challenges facing airlines.

Emirates confirmed some flights returned to their origin airports or to hubs near the departure points, but gave no further details.

The conflict initially shut large parts of Gulf airspace and sent regional traffic to near zero.

Emirates, Etihad, Qatar Airways and flydubai have since restored many services, though intermittent drone and missile alerts continue to prompt sudden diversions.

The UAE briefly closed its airspace again on Tuesday.

Between 0140 and 0200 GMT on Monday, Emirates services from several European ‌and Indian ⁠cities turned back mid-flight while over Saudi Arabia or the Arabian Sea, according to FlightRadar24 and AirNav Radar.

One London service that usually reaches Dubai in under seven hours returned after 11 and a half hours. Others turned back to Madrid, Lisbon and Paris.

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The Egyptian Gazette is the oldest English-language daily newspaper in the Middle East.
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