Customers who are booked on Etihad Airways flights to and from Doha are being provided with alternative options.
Etihad Airways will suspend all flights to and from Doha from Tuesday 6th June until further notice, the Abu Dhabi-based national airline of the United Arab Emirates has announced.
"The last flight from Abu Dhabi to Doha will depart as EY399 at 02:45 (local time) on 6th June. The last flight from Doha to Abu Dhabi will depart as EY390 at 04:00 (local time) on 6th June. Flights on 5th June will operate as normal," a spokesperson from Etihad said in a statement.
The announcement came after the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Bahrain announced today (Monday) that they were severing diplomatic ties with Qatar, as tensions escalate in the region over accusations that Doha sponsors terrorism.
In the region's most serious diplomatic crisis in years, Qatar's Gulf neighbours Riyadh, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates as well as Egypt all announced they were severing ties with gas-rich Qatar.
Qatari diplomats have been given 48 hours to leave the UAE after Abu Dhabi accused Doha of "supporting, funding and embracing terrorism, extremism and sectarian organisations," said state news agency WAM.
Qatari citizens have been informed by the UAE that they have 14 days to leave, while citizens from Qatar have also been banned from passing through the UAE.
Emiratis are now banned from visiting or even travelling through by Qatar. The UAE has also restricted all air and sea movement with Qatar.
Saudi news agency SPA said Riyadh cut diplomatic ties and closed borders with its neighbour to “protect its national security from the dangers of terrorism and extremism”.
A Saudi official cited by SPA said the country decided to “sever diplomatic and consular ties with Qatar, and to close all land, sea and aviation ports”. The “decisive” measure was due to “gross violations committed by authorities in Qatar over the past years”, the Saudi statement said.
The UAE followed suit in cutting ties, and Egypt’s foreign ministry also accused Doha of supporting “terrorism” as it announced the severing of diplomatic relations. The statement said all Egyptian ports and airports would be closed to Qatari vessels and planes.
Bahrain’s news agency said the tiny kingdom was cutting ties with Doha over its insistence on “shaking the security and stability of Bahrain and meddling in its affairs”.
The Saudi-led Arab coalition fighting rebels in Yemen’s two-year war meanwhile said it was expelling Qatar over what it said was the country’s support for organisations including Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.
Doha has long faced accusations that it is a state sponsor of terror. It has been criticised in some quarters for its support of rebel groups fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and Qatari individuals have also been sanctioned by the US Treasury for terror-funding activities.
In recent weeks, Qatar has been accused outright of terror funding in articles which have appeared in the American media. It was also criticised for providing a sanctuary to former Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal, who earlier this month used his Doha base - where he has lived in exile for several years - to launch a new policy document. The Afghan Taliban opened an office in Doha in 2013.
Qatar, which will host the 2022 football World Cup, is a member of the US-led coalition to defeat the Islamic State group. The country is also home to the Al-Udeid airbase, where the US conducts all coalition air operations for the region.