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Airspace controls over east China to end at midnight today
SHANGHAI—Airspace controls
that have disrupted the travel plans of thousands of air passengers
traveling to and from Shanghai since Tuesday will end at midnight on
Saturday, according to the General Administration of Civil Aviation (CAAC).
“The controls will be removed on Sunday,” said Li Jingao, an official
with CAAC East China Air Traffic Management Bureau based in Shanghai.
The bureau continued to refuse to divulge the reason for the imposition
of the controls.
Shanghai Airport Authority said on its website at least 40 flights were
delayed at its two airports, Pudong and Hongqiao, on Friday, including
flights bound for Hong Kong, Harbin, Dalian and Chongqing. Li said the
situation was “much better” than the previous two days, but it would
still take a day or two for flights to return to normal.
He said the current delays were mainly due to a knock-on effect from the
past few days. “More flights are departing now to make up for the
previous delays and this has increased pressure on the airports that are
already operating at full capacity.”
More than 150 flights were delayed in Shanghai and about 7,000
passengers were affected during the first two days of the airspace
controls. Most flights were bound for domestic destinations including
Guangzhou, Xiamen, Shenzhen, Beijing and Dalian.
Shanghai Airlines Co. said some of its flights were delayed for nearly
six hours on Wednesday.
Sources at the Baiyuan airport in Guangzhou, where 1,600 passengers
suffered delays on Tuesday, said several flights were still affected,
but only for brief periods, with no large-scale passenger delays.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |