Thousands of cruise passengers are trapped in Gulf ports due to Iran war


Thousands of cruise line passengers are trapped in ports in the Gulf due to the war in the Middle East.

They and crews are unable to leave the ships, which have become floating hotels, due to the escalating hostilities.

At least six ships from big companies are said to be at a standstill and awaiting news of when they can leave.

This situation has left thousands of travellers and crew stranded in the ports of Dubai and Doha, with no viable exit routes or ‘safe corridors’ open at the moment.

The cruise ship passengers are just the latest holidaymakers to become stranded in the region, with other tourists also caught up in the escalating chaos.

Families have described terrifying scenes as missile interceptions lit up the skies above Dubai, hotels were evacuated and airports descended into confusion as flights were cancelled without warning.

There are now worries about how long the passengers will be stranded and how the ships are going to cope with all the basic services, food, drink, water etc.

‘The activation of emergency protocols has forced captains to suspend scheduled itineraries in the face of the latent risk in the Strait of Hormuz and the exponential increase in the cost of insurance policies that, in many cases, they have stopped covering operations in the area. 

‘This forced immobilisation is not only a problem of fuel or supply logistics, but a matter of security that transcends leisure to enter the terrain of a large-scale operational crisis’ says leading travel portal Hosteltur.com.

Thousands of cruise passengers are trapped in Gulf ports due to Iran war

Thousands of cruise line passengers are trapped in ports in the Gulf due to the war in the Middle East. Pictured: A cruise ship is docked at the terminal close to the old port, in Doha, Qatar

The cruise ship passengers are just the latest holidaymakers to become stranded in the region, with Bother tourists also caught up in the escalating chaos.. Pictured: Smoke billows from an oil tanker under U.S. sanctions, that was hit off Oman's Musandam peninsula

The cruise ship passengers are just the latest holidaymakers to become stranded in the region, with Bother tourists also caught up in the escalating chaos.. Pictured: Smoke billows from an oil tanker under U.S. sanctions, that was hit off Oman’s Musandam peninsula

This handout satellite image taken by 2026 Planet Labs PBC shows a view of Dubai's port of Jebel Ali on March 1, 2026 with smoke plumes billowing after an Iranian projectile attack

This handout satellite image taken by 2026 Planet Labs PBC shows a view of Dubai’s port of Jebel Ali on March 1, 2026 with smoke plumes billowing after an Iranian projectile attack

‘The sector, which was in the middle of the peak of the winter season, is now facing a situation of technical paralysis that transcends the simple cancellation of itineraries.

‘The impossibility of carrying out the planned rotations has forced companies to reevaluate not only the safety of their guests and crews but also the viability of their logistics structures. 

‘The industry is waiting for safe corridors that allow the evacuation or repositioning of fleets to less compromised international waters.’

The magnitude of the standstill is currently affecting at least six large cruise ships that are immobilised in the ports of Dubai and Doha. 

These vessels, which were scheduled to continue their voyages or transfer passengers, have been ordered to remain docked or anchored in areas considered safe until international organisations determine new shipping routes. 

The situation has led to a saturation of port services, complicating not only passenger management but also the provisioning necessary to maintain the basic operational capacity of the ships, which have effectively become floating hotels with no ability to move.

The impact is concentrated mainly on the groups that dominate winter operations in the Persian Gulf.

But cruise passengers are not the only holidaymakers trapped by the spiralling conflict.

British tourists caught up in chaotic scenes at Dubai Airport have spoken of their nightmare experiences during the Iranian missile and drone attack on the city.

Grandmother Mina Pattni, 62 and her family were staying at the Fairmont Hotel on the Palm Jumeirah, which was hit by either a drone or debris, starting a fire.

‘It was absolutely terrifying,’ said Mina, from Leicester. ‘We were just sitting down to eat on Saturday night when we heard some interceptions of drones or missiles in the air.

‘That was scary enough, but just as we ordered, there was this terrific bang and we could see that the side of the building had been hit and everyone was evacuated until the fire was extinguished.’

Mina was travelling with her husband Latash, 67, and their daughter and son in law and two grandsons Krish, two and 5-month-old Rohin.

‘The children were very frightened,’ said Mina. ‘They picked up the slightly panicky mood from the other guests, though the hotel staff were very good and still managed to serve cold food, even though the gas in the hotel had to be turned off.

‘With our flight home on Sunday cancelled, we decided to stay with a relative in Dubai, mainly so that the children would be in a calmer atmosphere.’

Like several other Brits congregated outside Terminal 3 at DXB this morning, the Pattnis hoped to make it on an Emirates flight to Heathrow, or possibly a later one to Gatwick.

Travellers were corralled outside the busy Emirates terminal waiting to be called forward for their flights, heading mostly for Russia and the Indian sub-continent, but with a few headed for the UK and Europe.

Many of the people laden down with luggage in the throng were critical of poor communications from the airline, but said they couldn’t fault the hotels where they had to extend their stays.

Father and son James, 18 and Jim Dixon, 61 from Leicester were due to fly back to the UK from Dubai on Saturday afternoon, and after checking in, they were held at the airport for five hours before being moved to a hotel to begin the long wait.

‘The communication hasn’t been great, to be honest,’ said Jim. ‘We’ve had more information from people back home, but I do understand it’s a pretty exceptional situation.

‘His mum is fretting a bit, but we’ve reassured her that it’s not so bad. It doesn’t feel like a war zone really, we were in a nice hotel and it was fairly relaxed.

‘The hotel told us that Emirates had told us to come here today and get on a flight to Heathrow. We hope we’ll be back today, but if not, we’ll see what happens.’

Accountants John Barndell, 37 from London and Greg Coull, 35 from Edinburgh had been on a business trip to India and were only supposed to be in transit at Dubai to change flights.

‘We were well taken care of by the airline and the hotel, though the comms could definitely have been better’ said John.

‘We just want to get any flight to Europe – we’ll go anywhere,’ he said. ‘If we had been an hour earlier or two hours later, we’d have probably made it back to London.

Natalie Copeland, 45, and her husband Olly, 47, from Snettisham, Norfolk, were returning from a dream holiday to Singapore and Sri Lanka when they were caught by the travel chaos.

Window firm boss Olly told the Mail: ‘We had a nice four-hour flight from Colombo and just had about 90 minutes to change flights, so we had a pint and when we went to the gate, it was obvious everyone was confused.

Police press officer Natalie added: ‘I couldn’t get a signal on my phone, but someone told us it was Donald Trump up to his tricks again and the penny dropped. Initially we were told we’d be delayed for a couple of hours, but then it was cancelled’

So their 90-minute stopover turned into a four-day wait, which they hope will end today with a flight back to Heathrow.

They described the situation for the thousands of travellers who were stranded as ‘quite chaotic’, and the hotel they were assigned to was ‘old and dirty’, but they were thankful for a bed for the night.

Natalie added: ‘That first night was quite frightening and we got an emergency safety alert coming up on our phone in the middle of the night, which didn’t help.

‘We hope we’ll get home by tonight and we’ll have some different holiday memories from the ones we expected!’