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UAE air force told 'not to escalate' Qatar air dispute
by Staff Writers
Abu Dhabi (AFP) Jan 23, 2018


The air force of the United Arab Emirates has been ordered "not to escalate" a civil aviation dispute with regional rival Qatar, a military official said Tuesday.

"From the beginning of the Qatari provocations, we were given instructions from our superiors not to escalate in this area as part of our commitment to the principle of regional security and peace, and also for the safety of these planes and those on board," Brigadier General Hilal Sayeed al-Qubaisi told a press conference in Abu Dhabi.

Qubaisi said the UAE air force -- a key member of a Saudi-led military coalition which has intervened in Yemen's war -- had developed "new routes".

"Our air force can reach the usual destinations using Saudi airspace. This action by Qatar will never affect the movement of our military aircraft," he said.

The UAE has accused Qatari fighter jets of "intercepting" two Emirati passenger planes en route to Bahrain a week ago and has since filed a complaint to the United Nations.

It said Qatari fighter jets had flown within two miles (1.2 kilometres) of two flights descending towards Bahrain's international airport, drawing a swift denial from Doha.

The rivals have clashed over alleged airspace violations in recent weeks, as a diplomatic crisis in the Gulf enters its eighth month.

Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt cut all ties with Qatar last June over Qatar's alleged ties to Islamist extremists and Shiite Iran.

Qatar, which denies the accusations, is banned from using the airspace of the four states under the boycott, although UAE airlines continue to operate flights through Qatari airspace.

Abu Dhabi is now looking at re-routing flights to Bahrain to avoid Qatari airspace.

For its part, Qatar has accused UAE fighter jets of violating its airspace both in December and this month, and it has filed formal complaints with the UN.

OIL AND GAS
Radioactivity from oil and gas wastewater persists in Pennsylvania stream sediments
Durham NC (SPX) Jan 23, 2018
More than seven years after Pennsylvania officials requested that the disposal of radium-laden fracking wastewater into surface waters be restricted, a new Duke University study finds that high levels of radioactivity persist in stream sediments at three disposal sites. The contamination is coming from the disposal of conventional, or non-fracked, oil and gas wastewater, which, under curre ... read more

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