Gatwick Airport compelled to close runway for nearly an hour over ‘suspected drone’

May 14, 2023 at 5:33 PM
Gatwick Airport compelled to close runway for nearly an hour over ‘suspected drone’

Gatwick Airport was compelled to close its runway for nearly an hour attributable to a “suspected drone incident”.

A Gatwick spokesperson stated: “Operations at London Gatwick had been suspended quickly at 1.44pm, whereas investigations into the sighting of a suspected drone near the airfield befell.

“These investigations have now completed and the airfield reopened at 2.35pm.

“Twelve inbound plane had been diverted to different airports throughout the investigation, nonetheless we count on many of those to return to London Gatwick as we speak.”

They added that passenger safety was the airport’s “absolute precedence”.

The disrupted flights included a British Airways flight from Mallorca to Gatwick, diverted to Stansted Airport, and an easyJet flight from Venice, diverted to Luton Airport.

Landings have since resumed on the airport, in Crawley, West Sussex.

Gatwick Airport’s runway was shut down for 30 hours in December 2018 attributable to an incident involving a number of drone sightings.

Read extra:
UK’s best and worst airports for flight delays revealed
Heathrow says passenger numbers up 74% on last year

The airport, Britain’s second busiest, stated there have been greater than 100 drone sightings across the website over three days.

The 2018 incident was the primary time a significant airport within the UK had been shut down attributable to drones.

The disruption affected greater than 140,000 passengers throughout a complete of 1,000 flights.

Passengers queue at Gatwick Airport
Image:
A drone incident in 2019 sparked three days of disruption at Gatwick Airport

Two suspects from the city of Crawley – just a few miles from the airport – had been arrested on the time. However, they had been later launched, with no additional motion taken.

No one has ever been charged over the incident, which Gatwick insisted was a complicated, malicious and well-planned assault.

As a results of the incident, the federal government launched new laws to increase no-fly zones round airports from 0.6miles (1km) to a few miles.

Those who recklessly or negligently endanger an plane with a drone can withstand 5 years in jail underneath UK regulation.