Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization said on 17 July that all of the country’s airports have resumed normal operations and that Iranian airspace is once again open to international overflights around the clock. While commercial services are back on a 24-hour schedule, the regulator maintained a ban on training and recreational flights and limited Tehran’s Mehrabad airport to operations before 19:00. The nationwide reopening follows a series of repairs to facilities damaged during the 12-day conflict between Iran and Israel. Tabriz International Airport was the first to return to service, handling a Tabriz-to-Istanbul flight by domestic carrier Ata Airlines on 5 July after a 23-day shutdown caused by Israeli air strikes. Isfahan’s Shahid Beheshti International Airport, which had been closed for 34 days after multiple attacks during the same conflict, reopened fully on 17 July. Civil aviation officials said the airport is operating without restrictions, rounding out the restoration of Iran’s domestic and international aviation network.
#Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization announced that all airports across the country have resumed normal operations, and the country's airspace is once again open to international overflights around the clock. https://t.co/X3n9XEi4Dc
♦️ سازمان هواپیمایی: 🔹 فعالیت فرودگاههای کشور ۲۴ ساعته شد 🔹 فقط مهرآباد تا ساعت ۱۹ فعال است 🔹 پرواز آموزشی و تفریحی تا اطلاع ثانوی ممنوع است https://t.co/8fDRBzRRKg
🔴 Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization announced that all airports across the country have resumed normal operations, and the country's airspace is once again open to international overflights around the clock.