Japan accelerates evacuation of nationals from Middle East amid Iran conflict

Following the announcement of evacuation plans, Japan has accelerated operations to bring home its nationals from the Middle East amid the spreading Iran conflict. On Sunday, 107 arrived at Narita Airport via government-chartered flight. On Monday, 208 evacuated from Qatar reached Saudi Arabia, with around 300 more, including those from Kuwait and Bahrain, scheduled to arrive in Japan on Tuesday.

Building on the Foreign Ministry's March 5 announcement to evacuate nationals from Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and the UAE via land routes to Saudi Arabia and Oman for chartered flights, Japan has ramped up operations as the conflict, which erupted on February 28, intensifies.

The ministry reported that 208 Japanese from Qatar arrived in Saudi Arabia on Monday. A second chartered flight, carrying about 300 people—including those already in Saudi Arabia and evacuees from Kuwait and Bahrain—is set to depart Riyadh later Monday and reach Narita on Tuesday morning. Earlier, 107 nationals arrived at Narita late Sunday.

This swift response, involving the Foreign Ministry, Defense Ministry, and Self-Defense Forces, contrasts with the slower evacuation during the 2021 Afghanistan crisis, where Self-Defense Forces aircraft took over 10 days to deploy after Kabul's fall. The effort underscores Japan's growing role in overseas citizen protection while balancing ties with the U.S. and Gulf states.

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Escalating tensions from US-Israeli strikes on Iran—codenamed 'Operation Epic Fury,' reportedly killing supreme leader Ali Khamenei—and Iranian missile retaliation have shut down airspace across the Middle East since February 28, 2026. Thousands of flights canceled daily, stranding hundreds of thousands at hubs like Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Doha, and Israel. Airlines including Emirates, Etihad, and Qatar Airways suspended operations with limited resumptions on March 2. The UK FCDO updated warnings for 21 countries, advising against all but essential travel to several nations and shelter-in-place for British nationals.

Japan's Foreign Ministry announced plans to evacuate nationals from four Middle Eastern countries using chartered aircraft amid the ongoing U.S.-Israeli war against Iran. The ministry has raised danger advisories for these nations, plus Saudi Arabia and Oman, to the second-highest level 3, urging citizens to avoid all travel.

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The fifth government-chartered flight evacuating people from the Middle East landed at Tokyo's Haneda Airport from Muscat, Oman, on Friday, carrying 42 Japanese nationals and four South Koreans from Oman and the UAE. This brings the total evacuated via these flights to 822.

Indonesia's Foreign Ministry confirms that 32 citizens evacuated from Iran will arrive in Jakarta on Tuesday, March 10, 2026, via two flight batches from Baku, Azerbaijan. The citizens are reported to be safe and well while awaiting their flight. This marks the first phase of evacuations that began on March 6.

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As Middle East tensions worsen after U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran—with no Korean casualties reported—South Korea is prioritizing evacuations for 21,000 nationals in the region, stabilizing plunging markets, and securing oil amid Strait of Hormuz closure fears. This follows initial assurances of stable energy supplies.

In the latest development from the Middle East conflict that shut down regional airspaces since February 28, a commercial flight from Dubai to Sydney has become the first to Australia. The UAE government announced 60 flights would use dedicated emergency air corridors. Australia's Foreign Minister Penny Wong confirmed the flight would only proceed if safe, with thousands of Australians still stranded.

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Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi expressed 'serious concern' over attacks on vessels around the Strait of Hormuz during an online G7 leaders' meeting, urging early de-escalation. Japan plans to lead in releasing oil reserves to avert an economic crisis through international coordination.

 

 

 

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