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London

London's Gatwick Airport forced to divert flights due to drone activity

12 flights were diverted to surrounding airports including London Stansted.

INCOMING FLIGHTS WERE suspended at Gatwick Airport for nearly an hour today after reports of a drone near the airfield.

12 incoming flights had to be diverted to other airports because of the alert.

The airport previously cancelled or diverted around 1,000 flights between 19 and 21 December 2018 because of drone reports.

No culprit was found, and there was criticism over the amount of time it took for the runway at the London airport to reopen.

A Gatwick spokesman was unable to say whether a drone had been discovered after the latest reported sighting.

The spokesman said: “Passenger safety is the airport’s absolute priority and – following established procedures – operations at London Gatwick were suspended temporarily at 1344, while investigations into the sighting of a suspected drone close to the airfield took place.

“These investigations have now completed and the airfield reopened at 1435. Twelve inbound aircraft were diverted to other airports during the investigation, however we expect many of these to return to London Gatwick today.”

British Airways said one of its flights was affected, with it landing at Stansted before refuelling and returning to Gatwick.

Dublin Airport encountered similar problems earlier this year, with delays and diversions happening at the airport six times in April and March due to illegal drone use.

This led to the airport purchasing anti-drone technology after airlines voiced anger over the disruptions.

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