On the morning of 8 May 2026, a Garuda Indonesia A330-900neo — registration PK-GHI — lifted out of Jeddah on flight GA4208 to Medan, Indonesia, carrying Hajj pilgrims home. The routing crosses the Arabian Sea and southern India before dropping southeast across the Bay of Bengal — normally around eight hours of flying.
Hours later, the A330 was still over southern India — not because it had failed to make progress, but because it was flying in circles: roughly 24 holding loops, about one every ten minutes, for some four and a half hours. The reason will be a teaching case in airline operations centres for years.
Quick Facts
- Flight: Garuda Indonesia GA4208, Jeddah → Medan (Kualanamu)
- Aircraft: Airbus A330-941 (A330neo), registration PK-GHI, Rolls-Royce Trent 7000s
- Date: 8 May 2026
- Holding pattern: ~4 hours 30 minutes (roughly 24 loops) over southern India
- Why: Temporary closure of Bay of Bengal airspace, reportedly for an Indian Agni-6 missile test
- Total airborne time: 12 hours 39 minutes, on a route that normally takes about eight
A long flight got a lot longer
Jeddah-to-Indonesia is core business for Garuda. Every Hajj season the airline shuttles tens of thousands of pilgrims between Saudi Arabia and the archipelago, and the A330neo’s economics make it the right aircraft for the mission — efficient Trent 7000 fuel burn and, in Garuda’s configuration, 301 seats (24 business, 277 economy). The flight plan is well-trodden, and the corridor across the Bay of Bengal is one of the most direct pathways between the Middle East and Southeast Asia.
That morning it was not routine. India had temporarily restricted sections of airspace over the Bay of Bengal — reportedly for a test of the Agni-6 ballistic missile — closing one of the main corridors just as GA4208 approached the region. Rerouting was not as simple as turning and going around: international flights operate on pre-approved airways coordinated between multiple control regions, and the alternatives north of India and around Sri Lanka quickly filled with displaced traffic. The crew had fuel; the question was whether the corridor would reopen before the fuel ran down.

How the crew managed it
The crew elected to enter a holding pattern over southern India while awaiting clearance. Holding is a manoeuvre every pilot trains for, but holding for four and a half hours in a long-haul aircraft is genuinely unusual — flight-tracking data showed roughly 24 consecutive loops. Throughout, the crew had to weigh the calculation every operations centre dreads: divert now and strand hundreds of pilgrims at an unplanned airport, or keep waiting with diminishing fuel.
When the corridor reopened, the A330 left the hold, continued southeast and landed safely in Medan — roughly 12 hours 39 minutes after leaving Jeddah, on a route that normally takes about eight hours. No diversion was needed, and the decision to hold suggests the closure had been factored into the dispatch plan, with extra fuel uplifted before departure.
What it taught the industry
Three things. First: airspace closures that look like routine military notices on the ground translate, in the air, into long holds over open water — airlines have spent recent years modelling exactly this scenario as the corridors between Europe, the Middle East and Asia grow narrower. Second: the A330neo’s long-range efficiency gave the crew the endurance to wait out the closure rather than divert. Third: modern airliners are dispatched with contingency fuel for unexpected delays — though few scenarios involve remaining airborne for nearly four extra hours.
For ATC, for airline dispatchers, and for the regulators trying to write rules for an increasingly fractious airspace map, GA4208 is the case study.
Sources: Simple Flying, One Mile at a Time, FlightRadar24 trace.
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