Gulf News

Qatar’s actions escalate Gulf crisis

Doha’s attitude now is as reckless as its deliberate and intimidati­ng buzzing of passenger aircraft

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For the third time in weeks, warplanes from Qatar have deliberate­ly and wilfully buzzed civilian aircraft from the UAE, and the latest in this series of aggressive and intimidati­ng encounters involved a UAE passenger plane en route from Dammam to Abu Dhabi. As in the previous incidents, the passenger jet was following a regular and prescribed civilian air corridor when the Qatari warplanes flew too close and buzzed the aircraft. This time, the passenger plane was flying in Bahraini airspace.

In the past three months, Qatar has stepped up its deliberate intercepti­ons of both UAE and Bahraini civilian aircraft, and all the incidents have occurred within prescribed air corridors, in airspace controlled by civilian controller­s, and involved regularly scheduled flights. In other words, there is no other interpreta­tion of the fighter pilots’ actions than to say they were deliberate, and were done on orders from the powers that be. All the intercepti­ons have been recorded by air traffic control, showing that these buzzing incidents are planned. As a matter of course, these serious threats against unarmed civilian aircraft are acts of intimidati­on where, given the speeds involved, the warplanes’ capabiliti­es and the very short distances, there is absolutely no room for error and the lives of those on board the civilian planes are wilfully jeopardise­d. As a matter of course, the UAE’s General Authority on Civil Aviation is reporting the serious incident to the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on.

But what of those orders from the highest levels in Doha? Clearly, these three incidents now confirm that Qatar believes it has a right to engage in these barnstormi­ng flying circus antics. At the very least, that is blase and cavalier. It signals once more that Qatar has no intent of following internatio­nal norms, nor is it interested in resolving the current diplomatic disagreeme­nt between Doha and the four members of the anti-terrorism quartet, who have shut their respective air and sea spaces to Qatari aircraft and vessels. The quartet of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE and Egypt has also imposed financial restrictio­ns on the Qatari government to highlight its failure to meet its internatio­nal and regional obligation­s to fight those who spread terror and extremism across the broader region. While there have been on-and-off efforts again to try and amicably close this diplomatic chapter, it’s clear that the leadership in Doha is somehow satisfied with the status quo, and that it believes it now has a right to endanger and intimidate air passengers and civilian pilots and crews.

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