Airlines suspend Baghdad flights after bullets hit plane

Shots from machine gun hit a flydubai aircraft at 600m as it was landing on Monday

An Iraqi Airways aircraft lands at Baghdad International airport on Tuesday: Airlines from at least three countries suspended flights to Baghdad on Tuesday after bullets hit an aircraft operated by budget carrier Dubai Aviation Corp, known as flydubai. Photograph: Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters
An Iraqi Airways aircraft lands at Baghdad International airport on Tuesday: Airlines from at least three countries suspended flights to Baghdad on Tuesday after bullets hit an aircraft operated by budget carrier Dubai Aviation Corp, known as flydubai. Photograph: Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters

Six airlines from the United Arab Emirates, Turkey and Lebanon suspended flights to Baghdad on Tuesday after bullets hit an airplane operated by budget carrier Dubai Aviation Corp, known as flydubai, as it was landing at Baghdad airport.

Iraqi transport minister Bayan Jaboor said the plane was hit at an altitude of 600m (2,000 ft) by gunfire from what he judged was a light machine gun.

He did not rule out that Monday’s shooting could be a militant action but said security forces had identified the source.

A security official said authorities had rounded up suspects in farmland south of the airport, which is on the city’s western outskirts.

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Iraq's Shi'ite-led government has been trying to push back Islamic State militants since they swept through northern Iraq last June.

The nearest fighting to Baghdad's airport is on the western outskirts of Abu Ghraib, more than 10km (6 miles) away. Guns are widely available in Iraq and celebratory gunfire into the air is not uncommon.

An aviation official said Iraq had briefly suspended air traffic on Monday following the incident but allowed it to start again on Tuesday morning.

However, flydubai, Emirates Airlines, Sharjah's Air Arabia and Abu Dhabi's Etihad Airways suspended flights on Tuesday, in line with a directive from the United Arab Emirates' civil aviation authority.

UAE's state news agency WAM reported that the foreign ministry had summoned the Iraqi ambassador to Abu Dhabi to express serious concern about the incident.

Turkish Airlines and Lebanon’s Middle East Airlines (MEA) also suspended flights without citing the shooting incident. It was not clear when the airlines would resume service.

Company officials said Iraqi Airways and Iran's Caspian Airlines were operating flights to Baghdad on a normal schedule.

Jaboor said those airlines had operated nearly 40 flights in and out of Baghdad on Tuesday.

Speaking at a news conference, he denied reports that the airport itself was threatened and said a young girl with a small scratch was the only person injured in the incident.

An aviation official and a security official said two passengers were lightly injured when three or four bullets hit the body of the plane.

A spokesperson for flydubai confirmed that flight FZ 215 had damage to the fuselage consistent with small arms fire and said an investigation was under way. He denied that any passengers had needed medical treatment. - Reuters