Iran bars Lebanese planes from bringing back stranded citizens after Israeli ‘threat’

In this photo released by Imam Khomeini Airport City, an Iranian Mahan Air plane carrying Russian-made Sputnik V coronavirus vaccines lands at the Tehran's Imam Khomeini International Airport, Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021. Iran on Thursday received its first batch of foreign-made coronavirus vaccines as the country struggles to stem the worst outbreak of the pandemic in the Middle East. (Saeed Kaari/IKAC via AP)
Illustrative: An airplane lands at Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International Airport, February 4, 2021. (Saeed Kaari/IKAC via AP)
THE TIMES OF ISRAEL | Published February 15, 2025

Tehran says flights can resume when Beirut lets in Iranian planes; Lebanon stopped an Iranian plane from landing following an IDF warning against cash transfers to Hezbollah

Iran barred Lebanese planes from repatriating dozens of Lebanese nationals stranded in Iran on Friday, in response to Lebanon’s refusal to let an Iranian flight touch down at Beirut’s Rafik Hariri International Airport, following what Tehran described as an illegal Israeli threat.

Lebanon blocked the flight Thursday following a statement by the IDF that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps was using civilian flights to smuggle cash to Hezbollah. The IDF said it would use “all the tools at its disposal” to enforce a truce that requires Lebanon to halt arms transfers to the Iran-backed terror group.

Beirut’s move elicited protests by the Iran-backed terror group, a minor partner in the new Lebanese government.

Iran said Friday that it would forbid Lebanese flights to land until its own flights were cleared to land in Beirut.

The standoff has left dozens of Lebanese citizens stranded in Iran for three days after attending a religious pilgrimage. They had been due to return to Beirut on Iran’s Mahan Air before Lebanon barred the plane from landing.

Without mentioning the IDF statement, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said Friday that “the threat by the Zionist regime to a passenger plane carrying Lebanese citizens has disrupted normal flights to Beirut airport.”

Baghaei condemned what he said were Israel’s “gross and continuous violations of the principles and rules of international law and violations of Lebanon’s national sovereignty.”

He also called for the International Civil Aviation Organization and other world bodies “to stop Israel’s dangerous behavior against the safety and security of civil aviation.”

Planes at the Rafik Hariri International Airport in Beirut, Lebanon, on March 19, 2020. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File)

Lebanon’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation said on Thursday it had “temporarily rescheduled” some flights, including from Iran, until February 18 as it was implementing “additional security measures.”

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SOURCE: www.timesofisrael.com

RELATED: Iran Accuses Israel Of Disrupting Air Route To Lebanon


An aircraft flies over Beirut’s southern suburbs [File: Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters]
BARRON’S | Published February 15, 2025

Iran accused Israel on Friday of disrupting flights from Tehran to Beirut, after a decision barring two Iranian planes from landing in the Lebanese capital sparked protests.

Israel has repeatedly accused Hezbollah of using Lebanon’s only airport to transfer weapons from Iran and struck the area during its war with the Tehran-backed militant group which ended late last year.

The Iranian foreign ministry said that “the threat by the Zionist regime to a passenger plane carrying Lebanese citizens has disrupted normal flights to Beirut airport”.

The statement by ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei did not specify the nature of the threat attributed to Israel, but comes after Israeli military spokesman Avichay Adraee had warned the army was prepared “to thwart” any attempts to transfer funds or weapons to Hezbollah.

Hezbollah and Lebanese officials have denied Israel’s claims that Beirut’s Rafic Hariri International Airport was used to arm the militant group.

Baqaei condemned Israel’s “gross and continuous violations of the principles and rules of international law and violations of Lebanon’s national sovereignty”.

He also called for the International Civil Aviation Organization and other world bodies “to stop Israel’s dangerous behaviour against the safety and security of civil aviation”.

Lebanon’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation said on Thursday it had “temporarily rescheduled” some flights including from Iran until February 18 as it was implementing “additional security measures”.

That date coincides with the deadline for the full implementation of a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hezbollah.

The Israeli military’s Adraee has said that Iran and Hezbollah “have been exploiting… the Beirut international airport through civilian flights, to smuggle funds dedicated to arming” the group.

Late Thursday, a crowd of Lebanese supporters of Hezbollah blocked the Beirut airport road and burned tyres to protest the decision to bar the Iranian planes from landing.

AFP images showed young men raising Hezbollah’s yellow flag and holding portraits of the group’s former leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli strike in September, and of Iran’s slain Revolutionary Guards commander Qasem Soleimani.

After the airport protests, authorities said they were working to bring back Lebanese passengers stranded in Iran with planes belonging to the Beirut-based Middle East Airlines.

But Saeed Chalandari, CEO of Tehran’s Imam Khomeini Airport said on Friday that Iran had rejected the proposal.

“Naturally, we do not agree to their request, because if there is to be a flight between the two countries, it must be a two-way flight,” Chalandari told Iranian news agency Tasnim.

Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, said that Tehran could agree to the Middle East Airlines evacuation flights “on the condition that they (Lebanese authorities) don’t block Iranian flights.”

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SOURCE: www.barrons.com