If you were under the impression that relations between Qatar and the Saudi-led bloc that cut diplomatic ties with the filthy-rich sheikdom last summer were set to thaw, you might want to rethink that assumption because, on Monday, Qatar fighter jets intercepted a U.A.E. plane on a regular flight to Bahrain’s capital.
Or at least according to the U.A.E’s General Civil Aviation Authority which says “it received a complaint from one of the UAE’s national carriers that one of its aircraft on a flight to Manama on a normal route had been intercepted by Qatari fighters”.
The plane was flying on usual path, the U.A.E. added, before calling the move “a flagrant [and] a serious threat to aviation safety” and a “violation to international law.” Here’s Bahrain’s statement:
Subsequently, the U.A.E. claimed a second airliner had been intercepted:
This comes just days after Qatar accused a U.A.E. fighter jet of violating its airspace. That alleged violation prompted Qatar’s UN envoy to declare that Doha would take “necessary measures” to defend its borders and airspace.
Obviously, there’s a connection between that and today’s incident.
Needless to say, Monday’s news did not go over well with Qatari stocks, which quickly erased gains on the way to diving more than 2%:
That would be the biggest drop since the blockade began and comes just five days after the QE broke above its 200-day moving average for the first time since April.
For its part, Qatar is denying the allegations:
Here’s Sheikh Saif Al Thani, head of the Qatari government communications office, calling this “completely untrue”:
Leave A Comment