Police say ‘currently no indication of foul play’ in fire that closed Heathrow

Update Police say ‘currently no indication of foul play’ in fire that closed Heathrow
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Departure Hall in Heathrow Terminal 3 in London. (Reuters)
Update Police say ‘currently no indication of foul play’ in fire that closed Heathrow
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Britain's Heathrow airport, Europe's busiest, was shut down early on March 21 after a major fire at neighborhood electrical substation supplying power to the sprawling facility west of London, officials said. (AFP)
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Police say ‘currently no indication of foul play’ in fire that closed Heathrow

Police say ‘currently no indication of foul play’ in fire that closed Heathrow
  • Airport authorities said they ‘expect significant disruption’ over the coming days

LONDON: London’s Metropolitan Police force said Friday there was “currently no indication of foul play” behind a fire at an electricity substation that closed Heathrow airport, causing travel chaos.

Announcing that the force’s Counter Terrorism Command was leading the investigation into the blaze near Europe’s busiest air hub, a spokesman said: “While there is currently no indication of foul play, we retain an open mind at this time.”

Heathrow airport, Europe’s busiest, was shut down early Friday for 24 hours after a major fire at an electricity substation cut power to the sprawling facility west of London.
Airport authorities said they “expect significant disruption” over the coming days, with hundreds of flights and thousands of passengers affected.
“Heathrow is experiencing a significant power outage,” the airport operator said in a statement on its website, adding it would be closed until just before midnight Friday (2359 GMT).
“Passengers should not travel to the airport under any circumstances until the airport reopens.”
Online flight tracking service FlightRadar24 said Heathrow’s closure would affect at least 1,351 flights to and from the airport.
It said 120 flights to the airport were in the air when the closure was announced.

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What we know about London’s Heathrow airport

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London Fire Brigade said there had been a “significant” fire at a substation in Hayes, a nearby town in the London borough of Hillingdon, which caused the power outage.
It said 10 fire engines and around 70 firefighters were on the scene, while around 150 people had been evacuated from nearby properties.
Images on social media — which could not immediately be verified by AFP — showed huge flames and smoke rising from the substation.
Other videos, apparently shot inside Heathrow’s terminals, showed shuttered shops and deserted corridors, lit only by emergency lighting.
“The fire has caused a power outage affecting a large number of homes and local businesses, and we are working closely with our partners to minimize disruption,” said London Fire Brigade assistant commissioner Pat Goulbourne.
He said the blaze was first reported at 11:23 p.m. (2323 GMT).
“This is a highly visible and significant incident, and our firefighters are working tirelessly in challenging conditions to bring the fire under control as swiftly as possible,” a statement said.
British utility firm Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks said on its website that an “unplanned outage” had left more than 16,000 homes without power in the area.




Britain's Heathrow airport, Europe's busiest, was shut down early March 21 after a major fire at an electrical substation supplying power to the sprawling facility west of London, officials said. (AFP)


Heathrow handles more than than 80 million passengers a year and the operator says there are around 1,300 takeoffs or landings a day.
Seven United Airlines flights returned to their airport of origin or to other airports and all Friday flights to London Heathrow are being canceled, a spokesperson said.
In Sydney, Qantas said two flights en route to Heathrow — a non-stop flight from Perth and another via Singapore — had both diverted to Paris’ Charles de Gaulle airport.
It said two other flights scheduled to fly out of London on Friday were likely to be impacted.
In January, the government gave permission for Heathrow to build a third runway — which could be ready by 2035 — after years of legal wrangling brought on by complaints from local residents.
Five major airports serve the capital and towns nearby.
But capacity is stretched, especially at Heathrow whose two runways each measure almost four kilometers in length, while the airport covers a total area 12.3 square kilometers.
It opened in 1946 as London Airport before being renamed Heath Row, a hamlet demolished two years earlier to make way for the construction.
Situated 25 kilometers (15 miles) west of central London, the present Heathrow serves 200 destinations in more than 80 countries, with passengers having access to four terminals.
Among its main flight destinations last year were Dublin, Los Angeles, Madrid and New York.


In streets of Old Dhaka, life bustles all night during Ramadan

In streets of Old Dhaka, life bustles all night during Ramadan
Updated 31 sec ago
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In streets of Old Dhaka, life bustles all night during Ramadan

In streets of Old Dhaka, life bustles all night during Ramadan
  • Old Dhaka is the historic core and original settlement of Bangladesh’s capital
  • Its unique food scene draws crowds from all over the city during iftar and sahoor

DHAKA: The streets of Old Dhaka stay alive all night during Ramadan, with grocery shops, tailor stalls, hair salons, and eateries keeping their doors open as people from across the Bangladeshi capital flock to the neighborhood for its local delicacies that cannot be found anywhere else.

Old Dhaka is the historic core and original settlement of the city of Dhaka.

Vibrant and densely populated, it is known for its rich cultural heritage and traditional architecture. It is the heart of the Bangladeshi capital’s old markets and residential buildings, many of which date back to the 17th century, when Dhaka was an important part of the Mughal Empire.

Forgotten throughout the year by the rest of the city, where life revolves around modern settlements and business districts, residents of Old Dhaka are reminded of their significance during the fasting month, when their neighborhood becomes a main attraction.

“Only in the month of Ramadan we work at full capacity. Every day, we receive new orders, and sometimes, we even have to refuse them,” said Mohammed Nasir Uddin Sagar Khan,

a tailor shop owner in Old Dhaka’s Nazirabazar.

“We earn much more during Ramadan. The money I earn is quite good.”

His shop remains open throughout the night until a bit after sahoor, or around daybreak, after which it closes for a few hours of rest.

“It feels good working during those nights as the area remains crowded, with people coming from different places,” Khan said. “Media and TV channels of Dhaka come here during night to have biryani, ice cream, and chit-chat. We enjoy this ambiance very much.”

At a nearby salon in Agasadek lane, Somrat Hossain Sumon is dealing with a line of queuing customers.

“We experience a surge in clients,” he said. “During Ramadan, our customers start coming immediately after iftar … Usually, we continue till sahoor hours or as long as our customers need our services.”

While some people come to Old Dhaka for festive clothes and some for haircuts, what draws most is the neighborhood’s unique food scene.

Nazirabazar is widely considered the food capital of Old Dhaka, and guests not only from other parts of the city but also from areas 50-60km away regularly visit during Ramadan to taste various kinds of biriyani, kebab, and desserts.

“Our restaurants are crowded at all times. For sahoor, people even need to queue to secure a seat,” said Mohammed Abdullah Al Mamun, manager of Mamun Biriyani, one of the famous biryani spots in the neighborhood.

“People mostly come to our restaurant to have our signature dish beef tehari … We are famous for this dish.”

Tehari is a variety of biryani — a rice dish that to many in South Asia is a favorite Ramadan comfort food.

In Nazirabazar, it is the most sought-after item.

“Biryani from this place is famous around the world … Today, I came here particularly for this biryani,” said Shahjalal Scissor, a student who arrived in Old Dhaka from Bashundhora, an upscale area of new Dhaka.

“I came here to feel the heritage, the ambiance of this place, the tradition and nightlife of Old Dhaka. I am here to experience all these things.”

Maruf Ahmed, a businessman from Dhaka’s Uttara area, brought his family along to treat them to something unique for sahoor.

“The flavors I enjoy here are something one doesn’t get anywhere in Uttara,” he said.

“Most of the time, I have kebab from Bismillah Kebab. I think in the marination or spices they use, they have some secret which makes the taste different. Also, they roast the meat over coal, while in most places we’re used to oil-fried kebabs.”

To cap off iftar or sahoor, many opt for the iconic flavored yogurt drinks.

Beauty Lassi, one of the places that serve the drink in Old Dhaka, has been around for over 100 years.

The shop’s recipes have been passed down from its founder to the next generations, and the drinks it offers are nowhere else to be found.

“We have lassi in our locality too, but lassi at Beauty Lassi of Old Dhaka is unmatched. We don’t even compare it,” said Abdur Rahman Shihab, who arrived in Nazirabazar from Shonir Akhra with a group of friends.

They stayed in Old Dhaka for iftar.

“We don’t get this kind of food every day … All these dishes are a testament to heritage, each with its unique signature taste. It’s the specialty of Old Dhaka,” Shihab told Arab News.

“Every food served here has some special taste. That’s why we came here. We visit this place only on special occasions.”


‘I need to be home’: Pakistanis among stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

‘I need to be home’: Pakistanis among stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones
Updated 35 min 7 sec ago
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‘I need to be home’: Pakistanis among stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

‘I need to be home’: Pakistanis among stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones
  • Europe’s busiest airport has been shut down due to a blaze at a nearby electric substation causing power outage
  • Travel experts say the disruption will extend far beyond Heathrow, and global flight schedules will be affected

LONDON: Thousands of travelers stranded by a huge fire near London’s Heathrow, Europe’s busiest airport, scrambled to find ways to get home and reunite with their families on Friday as they faced what could be days of disruptions.
Heathrow was shut as around 70 firefighters sought to put down the blaze at a nearby electrical substation in the west of London that knocked out power at the airport as well as the area’s back-up power system.
Airlines advised passengers not to travel to the airport, and Britain’s energy minister Ed Miliband warned it would take time to recover from the “catastrophic” fire.
Waiting at central London’s Paddington station, which normally offers express train service to Heathrow, US traveler Tyler Prieb contacted airlines Friday morning, hoping to find a new flight back to his home in Nashville, Tennessee.
“I’m sure everybody is going to need a new flight somewhere, somehow. So I’m just trying to get ahead of that the best I can,” said Prieb, 36, who was in London for work and to see friends.
“Hopefully, it will just take me an extra day to get back to my wife and my daughter. And they are probably wishing I would be home already,” he said.

Firefighters extinguish the fire at the North Hyde electrical substation, which caught fire Thursday night and led to a closure of Heathrow Airport in London, Britain on March 21, 2025. (AP)

In the meantime, Prieb said he had asked OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT for ways to pass the time.
“I thought maybe I’d go explore another city somewhere,” he said.
Heathrow was due to handle 1,351 flights during the day, flying up to 291,000 passengers.
A Heathrow spokesperson told Reuters in an email that there was no clarity on when power would be restored, and they expected significant disruption over the coming days.
John Moriarty, another US traveler, listened attentively to his phone’s speaker, hoping to get through to his airline’s customer service helpline.

Passengers on a bus look at a parked plane as Britain’s Heathrow Airport has closed for the full day Friday after an electrical substation fire knocked out its power, disrupting flights for hundreds of thousands of passengers at one of Europe’s biggest travel hubs in London, Britain on March 21, 2025. (AP)

The 75-year-old said he was anxious to return to Boston to see his daughter, who had traveled from New York to visit him.
“All the lines are busy, so I might be here another day. Not the worst thing in the world. (London) is my favorite city, but I need to be home,” 75-year-old John Moriarty said.
Travel experts said the disruption would extend far beyond Heathrow, and global flight schedules will be affected more broadly, as many aircraft will now be out of position.
Mahmoud Ali, 40, an employee of Domino’s Pizza in London, had been due to fly to his native Pakistan to be with his wife and children, who he has not seen since last summer.
“They are waiting for me. I’m trying to call the airline and Heathrow (to find out) what time the situation will be resolved,” he said.
The fire has also forced the rerouting of incoming flights, leaving passengers unsure of where they will land.

Airplanes remain parked on the tarmac at Heathrow International Airport after a fire at a nearby electrical substation wiped out the power at the airport, near London, Britain on March 21, 2025. (REUTERS)

Some flights from the United States were turning around mid-air and returning to their point of departure.
Adrian Spender, who works at British retailer Tesco, said in a post on X that he was on an Airbus A380 that had been headed for Heathrow.
“#Heathrow no idea where we are going yet. Currently over Austria,” he wrote.


Flights canceled, thousands evacuated after Indonesia volcano eruption

Flights canceled, thousands evacuated after Indonesia volcano eruption
Updated 48 min 49 sec ago
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Flights canceled, thousands evacuated after Indonesia volcano eruption

Flights canceled, thousands evacuated after Indonesia volcano eruption
  • Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki, a 1,703-meter twin-peaked volcano on the tourist island of Flores, erupted for 11 minutes and nine seconds late Thursday
  • Several other flights – both domestic and international, including to Thailand, Singapore and Australia – have been delayed
JAKARTA: At least seven international flights from Indonesia’s resort island Bali have been canceled, an airport official said Friday, after a volcano in the archipelago nation’s east erupted, shooting dark ash eight kilometers into the sky and forcing thousands to evacuate.
Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki, a 1,703-meter (5,587-foot) twin-peaked volcano on the tourist island of Flores, erupted for 11 minutes and nine seconds late Thursday, authorities said, raising the volcano’s alert status to the highest level.
As of 9:45 a.m. (0145 GMT) Friday, “seven international flights had been canceled, six of them are Jetstar flights bound to Australia and one Air Asia flight to Kuala Lumpur,” Bali’s Ngurah Rai International Airport spokesman, Andadina Dyah, said in a statement.
Several other flights — both domestic and international, including to Thailand, Singapore and Australia — have been delayed, it said.
The local government has declared a 14-day emergency and established a command post to coordinate response efforts, the country’s disaster agency spokesman (BNPB), Abdul Muhari, said in a statement on Friday.
Abdul added that more than 4,700 residents have been evacuated as of Friday and called on those remaining to find a safe location.
“The people are asked to remain in safe locations and follow directives from the regional government,” Abdul said.
The local airport in Maumere, on Flores, the closest to the volcano, has not been affected by the ash, according to the transportation ministry.
“The ash column was observed grey to black with thick intensity,” Indonesia’s volcanology agency said in a statement about the eruption, which began at around 11:00 p.m. on Thursday.
Volcanic ash from the eruption blanketed several nearby villages on Friday.
At least two people were injured, including a man whose roof collapsed under volcanic debris, a local official said.
The agency warned residents of the risk of volcanic mudflows due to heavy rainfall.
The long eruption prompted the country’s geological agency to raise the volcano’s alert level to the highest of the four-tiered system.
Authorities imposed an exclusion zone between seven and eight kilometers (four to five miles) around the volcano, the agency added.
In November, Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki erupted multiple times, killing nine people, canceling scores of international flights to the tourist island of Bali and forcing thousands to evacuate.
Laki-Laki, which means “man” in Indonesian, is twinned with a calmer volcano named after the Indonesian word for “woman.”
Indonesia, a vast archipelago nation, experiences frequent seismic and volcanic activity due to its position on the Pacific “Ring of Fire.”

‘I need to be home’: stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

‘I need to be home’: stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones
Updated 21 March 2025
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‘I need to be home’: stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones

‘I need to be home’: stranded Heathrow passengers separated from loved ones
  • Fire at electrical substation causes Heathrow shutdown
  • Global flight schedules affected, incoming flights rerouted

LONDON:Thousands of travelers stranded by a huge fire near London’s Heathrow, Europe’s busiest airport, scrambled to find ways to get home and reunite with their families on Friday as they faced what could be days of disruptions.
Heathrow was shut as around 70 firefighters sought to put down the blaze at a nearby electrical substation in the west of London that knocked out power at the airport as well as the area’s back-up power system.
Airlines advised passengers not to travel to the airport, and Britain’s energy minister Ed Miliband warned it would take time to recover from the “catastrophic” fire.
Waiting at central London’s Paddington station, which normally offers express train service to Heathrow, US traveler Tyler Prieb contacted airlines Friday morning, hoping to find a new flight back to his home in Nashville, Tennessee.
“I’m sure everybody is going to need a new flight somewhere, somehow. So I’m just trying to get ahead of that the best I can,” said Prieb, 36, who was in London for work and to see friends.
“Hopefully, it will just take me an extra day to get back to my wife and my daughter. And they are probably wishing I would be home already,” he said.
In the meantime, Prieb said he had asked OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT for ways to pass the time.
“I thought maybe I’d go explore another city somewhere,” he said.
Heathrow was due to handle 1,351 flights during the day, flying up to 291,000 passengers.
A Heathrow spokesperson told Reuters in an email that there was no clarity on when power would be restored, and they expected significant disruption over the coming days.
John Moriarty, another US traveler, listened attentively to his phone’s speaker, hoping to get through to his airline’s customer service helpline.
The 75-year-old said he was anxious to return to Boston to see his daughter, who had traveled from New York to visit him.
“All the lines are busy, so I might be here another day. Not the worst thing in the world. (London) is my favorite city, but I need to be home,” 75-year-old John Moriarty said.
Travel experts said the disruption would extend far beyond Heathrow, and global flight schedules will be affected more broadly, as many aircraft will now be out of position.
Mahmoud Ali, 40, an employee of Domino’s Pizza in London, had been due to fly to his native Pakistan to be with his wife and children, who he has not seen since last summer.
“They are waiting for me. I’m trying to call the airline and Heathrow (to find out) what time the situation will be resolved,” he said.
The fire has also forced the rerouting of incoming flights, leaving passengers unsure of where they will land.
Some flights from the United States were turning around mid-air and returning to their point of departure.
Adrian Spender, who works at British retailer Tesco, said in a post on X that he was on an Airbus A380 that had been headed for Heathrow.
“#Heathrow no idea where we are going yet. Currently over Austria,” he wrote.


Russian drones hammer Ukraine’s Odesa as Czech leader visits

Russian drones hammer Ukraine’s Odesa as Czech leader visits
Updated 21 March 2025
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Russian drones hammer Ukraine’s Odesa as Czech leader visits

Russian drones hammer Ukraine’s Odesa as Czech leader visits
  • The attack comes as the US is pushing for a peace deal between Ukraine and Russia
  • Ukrainian, US and Russian delegations are due to meet in Saudi Arabia separately on Monday

ODESA, Ukraine: Russia pounded Ukraine’s Black Sea city of Odesa late on Thursday with one of its biggest drone attacks, injuring three teenagers and sparking fires as the Czech president visited, Ukrainian officials said.
The attack comes as the United States is pushing for a peace deal between Ukraine and Russia, and hoping to agree a partial ceasefire that would halt strikes on energy infrastructure by both sides.
Czech President Petr Pavel, a vocal backer of Kyiv who has led an effort to source more than one million artillery shells for Ukraine’s war effort, was in the port city for talks with regional officials at the time of the strikes.
“Significantly, it was during our meeting that the enemy once again massively attacked the Odesa region,” Governor Oleh Kiper said on the Telegram messaging app.
The long-range drones buzzed into the city in several waves, damaging infrastructure, residential houses and commercial buildings, and causing multiple fires, the interior ministry said.
Around 25 cars had been set ablaze at a car repair shop.
“We could not do anything. We were just standing and watching as everything was on fire. I am in total shock,” the shop’s owner, who gave her name as Inna, said.
Oleksandr Kovalenko, a military analyst, said that Russia used new tactics for the attack, having its drones descend from a higher altitude than usual and at high speeds to make it harder for Ukraine’s air defenses.
He said it was one of the “most massive” attacks on Odesa since Russia invaded in February 2022: “It was intimidation. Terror against the civilian population.”
Separately on Friday, Russia and Ukraine accused each other of attacking a major Russian gas pumping and measuring station that lies in a part of Russia’s Kursk region that Moscow’s forces recaptured from Ukraine earlier this month.
Moscow said Ukraine had blown up the facility in an act of terrorism. Kyiv said Russian forces shelled it with artillery in “a provocation” and denied any involvement.
Both Russia and Ukraine have agreed during separate talks with US officials that they are ready for a moratorium on strikes on energy infrastructure. Moscow rejected a more comprehensive 30-day ceasefire.
Ukrainian, US and Russian delegations are due to meet in Saudi Arabia separately on Monday to discuss the details, officials have said.
Russia launched a total of 214 drones at Ukraine overnight, the air force said. It did not specify how many drones targeted Odesa. The air force said it shot down 114 of the drones and that another 81 drones were “lost,” its term for those suppressed using electronic warfare defenses.
Ukraine has used drones to continue striking targets in Russia, hitting oil infrastructure and a strategic bomber base in recent days.