Israel begins flying home citizens stranded abroad by Iran conflict
World
By
AFP
| Jun 18, 2025
Israeli air defence systems activated to intercept Iranian missiles over the Israeli city of Tel Aviv on June 18, 2025. [AFP]
A first aircraft bringing home Israelis stranded abroad by flight cancellations resulting from the conflict with Iran landed at Ben Gurion Airport on Wednesday, the airport's authority said.
"Just a short while ago, the first flight of Operation Safe Return landed at Ben Gurion Airport," a statement said, adding that the flight had been operated by national carrier El Al and brought Israelis home from Larnaca in Cyprus.
Transport Minister Miri Regev said Tuesday that between 100,000 and 150,000 Israelis were stuck abroad, as Israel and Iran traded deadly fire in their most intense confrontation ever.
READ MORE
MPs dismiss email submissions on Finance Bill 2025 as spam
How Trump's chaos will ripple through Kenyan economy
New proposal to have cars older than 4 years inspected sparks fury
How bead work evolved from being symbolic to fashionable
TransCentury suffers setback in Sh2.2 billion loan row with Equity Bank
Kenya's trade pavilion in Japan attracts record 500,000 visitors
China signals breakthrough in new financial talks with Kenya
Liaison RE leads regional push to embed ESG into reinsurance strategies
Equity woos Italian leather industry investors for local partnerships
The ministry said all of Israel's commercial aircraft had been sent abroad to avoid them during the air war with Iran.
After suspending flights last week, El Al said it was "preparing rescue flights" starting Wednesday with planes departing from Larnaca, Athens, Rome, Milan, and Paris.
The low-cost Israeli airline Arkia also announced special flights this week to repatriate Israelis.
A statement from the airport’s authority said Wednesday that the return operation "is being managed in stages based on the level of risk and current security assessments, with a strong emphasis on the safety of passengers, aircrews and aircraft".
It urged the public not to go to Ben Gurion Airport to greet arriving passengers or order taxis to pick them up from the airport due to "the current security situation".
After decades of enmity and a prolonged shadow war, Israel launched a surprise air campaign against Iran on Friday.
Israel says the offensive is aimed at preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapons capability -- an ambition Tehran denies.
Iran said early Wednesday it fired hypersonic missiles at Israel in its latest retaliatory salvo.