- The flight tracking website shows planes that pass on the Gulf countries after the attack.
- 3% scheduled flights canceled in India while 17% in Pakistan, explains Flightradar24
- Flight cost, operational disruption and airline industry at risk of GPS usurpation, says the Association of Pacific Airlines
Taipei / New Delhi: Airlines, including United Airlines and Korean Air, reinstalled or canceled flights and a dozen Indian airports were closed on Wednesday after India organized a reprisals against Pakistan which fears a climbing.
India attacked Azad Cashmere and Pakistan said that it had killed five Indian fighter planes in the thrust, which followed an attack that had killed 26 people in the Jammu-et-Cachemire of illegal occupation (iiojk) last month.
The images of the flight tracking sites have shown a long line of airlines passing over Oman, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait after the attack, increasing the possibility of a congestion of the airspace.
Authorities in Pakistan said 57 international flights were in the country’s airspace when India hit. The office of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said that India’s action “had caused a serious danger for commercial airlines” belonging to the Gulf countries and “lives in danger”.
The Ministry of Civil Aviation of India did not immediately respond to a request for comments on the remarks of Pakistan.
In the past few days, India and Pakistan have closed their air areas to airlines in the other. World airlines like Lufthansa have also avoided Pakistan’s airspace.
Interior flights in the two countries have also been disrupted. 3% of the flights planned in India and 17% of the flights planned in Pakistan were canceled at 1030 GMT, according to Flightradar24.
The best airline in India Indigo said that it canceled 165 flights until Saturday morning. Its shares fell 1.1%. The flights belonging to Air India, Spicejet and Akasa Air were also canceled.
Pakistan said that its airspace was open after closing after attacks and that its airports were “fully functional”.
The images of Flightradar24 have shown civilian jets overvaining Pakistan airspace, but northwestern India continued to be deserted.
Concern for GPS usurpation
The evolution of the timetables of airlines should further complicate operations in the Middle East and South Asia regions for carriers, who are already struggling with conflicts in the two regions.
A spokesperson for Dutch airline KLM said he was not flying over Pakistan until further notice. Singapore Airlines said that she had stopped flying over Pakistani airspace since May 6.
Korean Air said that he had started to redirect his flights from Seoul Incheon – Dubai on Wednesday, opting for a southern road passing on Myanmar, Bangladesh and India, instead of the previous path through Pakistani airspace.
United Airlines said that he had canceled his flight to Delhi, partially citing “limitations in airspace”. The American airline operates a direct flight from Newark to New Delhi.
Thai Airways said flights to destinations in Europe and South Asia would be reassigned to leave early Wednesday morning, while the Taiwan Airlines of Taiwan have said that the flights to and since London, Frankfurt and Rome had been disrupted.
Flights from India to Europe have also been seen taking longer routes. Lufthansa Flight LH761 from Delhi in Frankfurt took approximately half an hour to reach its destination compared to Tuesday, according to Flightradar24.
The Association of Airlines of Asia-Pacific expressed its concerns about the impact of conflicts on airline operations.
“In addition to the costs and operational disruptions, there are security problems, because the usurpation of the GPS interfering with the flight operations over conflict areas is one of the highest risks facing the industry,” he said in a statement.
GPS usurpation is a malicious technique that manipulates data from the global positioning system (GPS), which can send out of course commercial lines.