
Air-travel disruption rippled across Asia on 26 April, with 279 flights delayed and 29 cancelled at major hubs in Dubai, Shanghai and Manila, according to airline-data tracker OAG. Flydubai and Emirates services were among those affected after a ground-handling systems outage at Shanghai Pudong (PVG) cascaded through crew-duty rosters and aircraft rotations. Dubai International (DXB) reported departure queues of up to 75 minutes during the mid-morning bank, forcing Emirates to issue a rare same-day re-booking waiver for point-to-point passengers holding non-refundable “Saver” tickets. Flydubai re-timed four South-Asian departures to keep narrow-body aircraft within regulated crew hours. The incident highlights the fragility of post-pandemic airline scheduling, where tightened duty-time rules and higher load factors leave little slack. HR and global-mobility teams should advise travellers to build larger lay-over buffers for critical connections, particularly if itineraries touch multiple Asian mega-hubs in the same duty trip. From a compliance perspective, UAE residence-visa holders stuck abroad must ensure they re-enter before the six-month outside-country limit resets on 30 April, or apply for the ICP’s re-entry permit—a process that now takes three working days and an AED 150 fee. Companies with rotational assignees should track passport-stamp timelines electronically to avoid inadvertent visa lapses if further delays occur.
For added administrative support, VisaHQ’s UAE desk can streamline these contingency measures by securing re-entry permits, residence-visa renewals and emergency travel documents online in as little as 24 hours. Its platform (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/) allows mobility managers to upload passport scans, track real-time application statuses, and set automated expiry alerts—minimising the scramble when flight disruptions upend carefully planned duty trips.
Airports Council International says it will convene an emergency task force next week to review contingency-planning standards for Asian hubs, a move likely to spur new SLA clauses in future ground-service contracts.
For added administrative support, VisaHQ’s UAE desk can streamline these contingency measures by securing re-entry permits, residence-visa renewals and emergency travel documents online in as little as 24 hours. Its platform (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/) allows mobility managers to upload passport scans, track real-time application statuses, and set automated expiry alerts—minimising the scramble when flight disruptions upend carefully planned duty trips.
Airports Council International says it will convene an emergency task force next week to review contingency-planning standards for Asian hubs, a move likely to spur new SLA clauses in future ground-service contracts.