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London's Heathrow airport, the busiest aviation hub of Europe, on Tuesday, 8 January, suspended all departing flights for a brief period following reports of a drone sighting, just three weeks after a similar incident at Gatwick airport led to the grounding of about 1,000 flights.
The flights were suspended at around 17:05 GMT. After about an hour, the flights resumed.
Arriving planes, however, continued to land at the airport. Around 81 airlines serving 204 destinations operate out of Heathrow, located west of London.
At 18:35 GMT, flights at the airport, which handles 2,13,668 passengers a day, resumed following the interruption.
A Heathrow spokesperson said the airport staff were continuing to monitor the situation.
Between 19 December and 21 December last year, nearly 1,40,000 people were affected after Gatwick airport, UK's second biggest hub, suspended its flights following drone sightings which occurred over a three-day period in the run-up to Christmas.
The latest incident came few days after both the airports reportedly invested significant amount of money in military-grade anti-drone technology.
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