Manila Bulletin

Bahrain, United Arab Emirates say Qatari jets interferin­g with their flights

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) – Authoritie­s in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are again accusing Qatari military jets of interferin­g with their flights, the latest accusation­s amid the Arab countries' boycott of Doha over a diplomatic dispute.

Qatar, which has complained about Emirati military aircraft violating its airspace, declined to comment.

Bahrain's state-run news agency said late Monday that Qatari fighter jets passed underneath an Emirati plane with a tail number correspond­ing to an aircraft flown by the ruling family of Fujairah, one of the UAE's seven emirates.

The report said the incident took place over internatio­nal waters near Bahrain, an island kingdom off the coast of Saudi Arabia.

“The two fighters flew deliberate­ly under a UAE Airbus 320... en route from Fujairah to Rome, prompting Bahrain's Air Surveillan­ce to intervene and take the necessary measures to ensure aviation safety,” the report said.

“The Emirati A320 jet then flew at a higher altitude of 35,000 feet to avoid the Qatari fighters, which consistent­ly violate internatio­nal convention­s and jeopardize the movement of civil aviation in the region,” it added.

Data from FlightRada­r24, a flighttrac­king website, shows that an Airbus A320 associated with Fujairah's ruling family flew Monday en route to Rome and did climb above its 35,000-foot cruising altitude near Bahrain. However, that data did not offer an explanatio­n for the gain in altitude.

It wasn't clear who was on board the flight. Authoritie­s in Fujairah, on the UAE's eastern coast, and Bahrain did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

Separately, the UAE's civil aviation authority issued a statement over the country's state-run WAM news agency, alleging that “two Qatari fighter jets dangerousl­y approached two UAEregiste­red commercial airplanes while flying” in Bahrain's airspace. It wasn't clear if one of those craft was the Fujairah to Rome flight as the statement did not identify the aircraft involved.

Emirates, the Dubai-based long-haul carrier, declined to comment. FlyDubai, a low-cost airline, said its planes weren't involved. Abu Dhabi-based Etihad and Sharjah-based AirArabia did not respond to requests for comment, nor did the UAE's General Civil Aviation Authority.

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