A Qatar Airways flight from Doha to Tripoli today was reported to
have landed instead in Alexandria after an armed group forced air
traffic control staff at Tripoli International Airport to deny it
permission to land there.
“We tried to negotiate with the armed group but did not succeed,” an
airport official said. The plane was then diverted to Egypt because of
fears that there might be trouble awaiting it at Tripoli’s Mitiga
airport or even at Misrata or Benghazi. There were, the source said, “a
considerable number of Libyans on board”.
According to the source, the flight refuelled at Alexandria and then
returned to Doha. It is not known if any passengers disembarked at
Alexandria.
The incident comes a day after a group of men forced their way into
the Qatar Airways office at the airport and ordered staff to leave. The
group reportedly said that they intended to prevent Qatari passenger and
cargo aircraft from landing in Libya, although they would not say why.
According to sources at the airport, they also said that they intended
to force the closure of the downtown Qatar Airways office in Tripoli
Tower.
Yesterday’s incident was condemned by the Interior Ministry which
said that the attackers represented “only themselves”. In a statement,
it described it as a “shameful” act that would send the wrong message
about Libya to the international community and foreign companies and so
hinder economic development and reconstruction projects.
Two months ago, Qatar Airways suspended
flights to and from Benghazi after militiamen forced non-Libyans
arriving on a flight from Doha back onto the plane and prevented Libyans
from boarding it for the return flight to the Qatari capital. According
to a Benghazi Local Council member at the time, the militiamen accused
Qatar of interfering in Libya’s internal affairs.
There have been periodic protests in Tripoli, Benghazi and elsewhere
as well as on social media sites alleging Qatari interference in Libya.
These tend to surface at times of crisis. In May, there were anti-Qatar
demonstrations in Tripoli, Benghazi
and other towns after armed groups besieging the Ministries of Foreign
Affairs and Justice in Tripoli in support of the Political Isolation
Law. At the time the demonstrators accused Qatar of involvement in the
sieges and of backing Libyan Salafists and the Muslim Brotherhood.
Qatar strongly denied that accusations and was backed by the Prime Minister, Ali Zeidan, who said that there was no evidence of Qatari interference.
Qatar Airways, which has been flying between Tripoli and Doha since
2003, reintroduced scheduled services between Doha and Tripoli in
February last year following the revolution. Initially, the route was
served three-times a week, via Alexandria, but due to demand the service
went daily last August. Flights became non-stop in June.
It is a popular route with Libyans many of whom like to transit
through Doha to other destinations in the Gulf and further east. Qatar
Airways also flies cargo to Europe from Tripoli.
Source: http://www.libyaherald.com
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