CAIRO: Egypt has reopened its airspace to Qatari flights, Cairo's civil aviation chief said Tuesday, following a thaw in relations between Doha and a Saudi-led bloc.
"The Egyptian Civil Aviation Authority at dawn on Tuesday approved requests by Qatari authorities to allow Qatari airlines to pass through Egyptian airspace," Ashraf Noweir told AFP.
"This decision allows EgyptAir and Qatar Airways to resume flights."
Egypt in June 2017 joined Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain in cutting ties with Qatar, accusing it of being too close to Iran and backing the Muslim Brotherhood, seen by Cairo and its Gulf allies as a "terrorist" group.
Qatar has denied the charges.
The four countries imposed a three-and-a-half-year blockade, closing their airspace to Qatari flights.
But a Gulf Cooperation Council summit last week, attended by Qatari leader Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, saw the two sides reconcile their differences and pledge to lift sanctions.