'I'd prefer to just be out': Passenger describes return to UK on government flight from Oman
British nationals who landed in the UK on the first government flight out of the Middle East since the widespread conflict began six days ago have told how they scrambled across borders to get on the plane.
The flight, originally scheduled to leave Oman's capital Muscat on Wednesday night, had its departure delayed by nearly 24 hours following technical issues.
More than 140,000 Britons in the region have registered their presence with the UK's Foreign Office, after US-Israeli strikes on Iran prompted retaliatory strikes by Iran across the region.
Fazal Chowdhury, a Dubai resident, has described the experience as "a little bit surreal to be honest", explaining he and his wife decided to drive to the Omani capital as soon as they saw the initial reports of attacks on the city.
Dubai has seen several direct strikes from Iran since Saturday, with damage reported at Dubai International Airport and several luxury hotels.
"We just made a run for it straight away, checked into a hotel in Muscat, and there we were just waiting," Chowdhury told the BBC after landing at Stansted on Friday.
Oman is situated across the Gulf of Oman from southern Iran but is about 1,200 miles (1,900km) away from Tehran so is further from the Iranian capital than most of the Middle East nations.
Its capital city Muscat is just a 280-mile drive from the UAE's biggest city Dubai, where many British tourists and expats are currently based.
Chowdhury and his wife registered with the Foreign Office as soon as the details of the government chartered flight were released, he said, adding they were "very lucky" to get a seat onboard.
Though he said the flight delay had been described as a "bit of a shambles", he told the BBC that he thought it had been managed well overall and the communication from the UK government had been "really good".

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Amelia Reid and Samuel Sharp arrived in Dubai last Friday for a long weekend, but by Saturday evening, were forced to shelter in the car park beneath their hotel.
"We ended up sleeping in a car park in the basement of the hotel with about 100 other people, after the alarms went off on our phones," said Sharp.
He described being "on edge for four days", after having breakfast in their hotel on Sunday and hearing a "massive bang".
Reid, who was travelling in a wheelchair, said the couple had left Dubai at around 12:00 on Thursday local time, and travelled from the Oman border to the airport via coach in "the hope that we'd get on the Government plane".
The Foreign Office had warned people to wait to be contacted rather than just turning up at Muscat International Airport.
But people were allowed to register their presence in Oman as soon as they were in the country.
One man, who didn't want to be named, said that he fled Dubai along with his young family over the weekend, driving themselves to Oman.
He described a "terrible" wait for the chartered plane to take off yesterday, after spending around 36 hours in Muscat International Airport with his wife and young child.
Following the missile strikes across the Middle East, airspace remains severely restricted in the region, with flights completely or partially grounded over Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Syria, the UAE and Israel.
In addition to the government chartered flight which landed on Friday, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said more than 4,000 people have arrived back in the UK on commercial flights from the UAE, including "vulnerable Brits".
When announcing the initial flight, the Foreign Office said it would prioritise the most vulnerable people, and that only British nationals, their spouse or partner, and children under 18 would be offered a seat.
Sir Keir said British Airways would be putting on daily flights from Oman, and the government will keep working with partners to "increase the speed and capacity of this airlift", adding additional charter flights would be scheduled in the coming days.
Foreign Office minister Hamish Falconer described the situation as "a consular challenge on a scale not seen since Covid" and said there were "no instant solutions".
Britons in Oman will be contacted as soon as the additional government-organised flights from Muscat become available, Falconer said.
However, he said commercial flights becoming available were "by far the most likely and the most rapid routes back to the UK".
Those eligible for government flights are being asked to pay for seats.
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