Dublin Airport flights resume after drone sparks suspension

AFP  |  Dublin 

Airport on Thursday briefly suspended flights following the "confirmed sighting" of a drone at the airfield north of the Irish capital.

Aviation authorities apologised to passengers for the suspension of flights for around 15 minutes after the was spotted in the skies overhead.

"Flight operations have now resumed... following an earlier drone sighting," the airport said on at around midday (1200 GMT).

Airport, which lies about six miles (10 kilometres) north of the city centre, handled nearly 30 million passengers in 2017.

Dozens of airlines operate from the Irish hub, flying to more than 180 destinations in 42 countries.

Thursday's incident follows several drone sightings in neighbouring Britain in the run-up to and last month which caused for tens of thousands of people.

near suspended all flights over three days in December after drones were repeatedly spotted in the air.

Meanwhile, Heathrow Airport, Europe's busiest hub, suspended all departing flights for around an hour in January following a drone sighting.

This week, the said the no-fly zones for drones around airports would be extended to three miles from next month.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, February 21 2019. 19:05 IST