The Civil Aviation Authority decided to suspend all departing and arriving flights from and to Arbil and Sulaimaniyah airports. (Representational Image)
Baghdad:
Iraq's Civil Aviation Authority ordered all flights to and from two northern airports be suspended beginning today due to danger from cruise missiles and bombers crossing to Syria.
"The Civil Aviation Authority decided to suspend all departing and arriving flights from and to Arbil and Sulaimaniyah airports" for 48 hours from 8:00 am (0500 GMT) today, it said in a statement, referring to airports in the autonomous Kurdish region.
The decision was made to "protect passengers and because of the crossing of cruise missiles and bombers from the northern part of Iraq to Syria, launched from the Caspian Sea and Iran and Iraq," it said.
Russia began carrying out strikes in Syria on September 30 in support of its longstanding ally President Bashar al-Assad, and its operations were apparently the cause of the Civil Aviation Authority's decision to suspend the flights.
In its bombing campaign, Moscow has twice fired salvoes of cruise missiles from warships in the Caspian Sea that passed over northern Iraq en route to their targets in Syria, most recently on Friday.
On Saturday, flights in and out of Lebanon were rerouted and some airlines cancelled services after Moscow requested they avoid an area over the eastern Mediterranean.
A US-led coalition is also carrying out strikes against IS in Iraq and Syria, where the jihadist group has declared a cross-border "caliphate" spanning territory it controls in the two countries.
Coalition spokesman Colonel Steve Warren told AFP that its operations, which have been ongoing since August 2014, were not the cause of the flight suspensions in Iraq.
"The Civil Aviation Authority decided to suspend all departing and arriving flights from and to Arbil and Sulaimaniyah airports" for 48 hours from 8:00 am (0500 GMT) today, it said in a statement, referring to airports in the autonomous Kurdish region.
The decision was made to "protect passengers and because of the crossing of cruise missiles and bombers from the northern part of Iraq to Syria, launched from the Caspian Sea and Iran and Iraq," it said.
Russia began carrying out strikes in Syria on September 30 in support of its longstanding ally President Bashar al-Assad, and its operations were apparently the cause of the Civil Aviation Authority's decision to suspend the flights.
In its bombing campaign, Moscow has twice fired salvoes of cruise missiles from warships in the Caspian Sea that passed over northern Iraq en route to their targets in Syria, most recently on Friday.
On Saturday, flights in and out of Lebanon were rerouted and some airlines cancelled services after Moscow requested they avoid an area over the eastern Mediterranean.
A US-led coalition is also carrying out strikes against IS in Iraq and Syria, where the jihadist group has declared a cross-border "caliphate" spanning territory it controls in the two countries.
Coalition spokesman Colonel Steve Warren told AFP that its operations, which have been ongoing since August 2014, were not the cause of the flight suspensions in Iraq.
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