No it wouldn't. I was an Air Traffic Controller for ten years. They use either .65 or ICAO rules in those countries. All of them follow them same guidelines and speak the same language, which is English. A no fly zone occurs when an emergency event takes place or when government directed. This is very odd, curious to see what happens over the next few days.
First thing to rule out would be weather. This can cause an NFZ esp. in the Summer with huge thunder cells
No it wouldn't. I was an Air Traffic Controller for ten years. They use either .65 or ICAO rules in those countries. All of them follow them same guidelines and speak the same language, which is English. A no fly zone occurs when an emergency event takes place or when government directed. This is very odd, curious to see what happens over the next few days.
Fine they're "temporary flight restrictions". Let's not get stuck on semantics unless it's illustrative