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Gulf Banks Flee DIFC, 30,000+ Flights Grounded, and Hormuz Shuts Down — The Week That Shattered the Middle East's Business Model

Major banks evacuate Dubai, airlines cancel 30,000+ flights, and the Strait of Hormuz closes as the U.S.-Israeli campaign against Iran triggers unprecedented business disruption.

·12 min read

Executive Summary

The U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran, now in its third week since February 28, 2026, has triggered the most severe business disruption in the Gulf region since the COVID-19 pandemic — and in some respects surpasses it. Major banks have evacuated Dubai International Financial Centre, global consulting firms have shuttered offices across four GCC countries, more than 30,000 flights have been cancelled, the Strait of Hormuz has effectively closed to commercial shipping, Amazon data centres have been struck by Iranian drones, and Qatar's largest LNG facility has halted exports for the first time in three decades.

Simultaneously, the four-year Ukraine-Russia war continues to grind Russia's economy toward recession, Houthi threats in the Red Sea have reignited amid the broader Iran escalation, and the civil wars in Sudan and Myanmar continue to displace millions. This report catalogues the office closures, travel advisories, infrastructure strikes, and workforce disruptions caused by active global conflicts for the week ending March 15, 2026.

Office Closures and Corporate Evacuations

Banking Sector Exodus from Dubai

The financial heart of the Middle East — Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) — experienced mass evacuations beginning March 11 after Iran's Khatam al-Anbiya military command explicitly threatened to target "economic centres and banks belonging to the United States and the Zionist regime" in the region.

Citigroup issued an internal memo directing staff to evacuate offices in both the DIFC and its Oud Metha location, with instructions to work from home until further notice. The bank subsequently closed most UAE branches until March 14, exempting only its Mall of the Emirates branch.

Standard Chartered, which derives approximately 6% of its income from the UAE, evacuated its Dubai offices and issued a work-from-home directive. The bank had increasingly based senior executives in Dubai prior to the conflict.

HSBC went further, suspending all operations in Qatar until further notice, instructing employees to work from home to ensure "the safety of customers and employees."

Consulting and Professional Services

PwC closed offices across Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, and Kuwait for the remainder of the week as a "precaution."

Deloitte instructed staff to vacate their DIFC offices on March 11 afternoon.

Multiple other DIFC-based firms evacuated but declined to be named publicly, citing the sensitivity of the situation.

Technology and Media

Bloomberg told employees based in the Gulf, including at its Dubai regional headquarters, that they could temporarily relocate and work from elsewhere.

Nvidia, Amazon, and Google had previously evacuated or closed Dubai offices in early March after initial strikes.

Energy Sector

Exxon Mobil evacuated non-essential employees from across its Middle East operations, including the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, where it maintains joint ventures in refining and petrochemicals. The CEO confirmed the evacuation on March 10, citing safety priorities and logistical constraints as Strait of Hormuz traffic stalled.

Retail and Consumer

Global brands shut Middle East stores as conflict caused widespread disruption to commercial operations.

Travel Advisories and Flight Disruptions

Government Travel Advisories

United States: The State Department arranged nearly 50 charter flights, returning approximately 47,000 U.S. citizens from the Middle East since the February 28 conflict onset. Non-emergency personnel and families were ordered to depart from UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Iraq, and Jordan. The U.S. Mission in Saudi Arabia closed after a drone attack, and the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait closed until further notice.

United Kingdom (FCDO): Updated travel advisories on March 4 for 10 countries bordering Iran. British nationals in Bahrain, Israel, Kuwait, Lebanon, Palestine, Qatar, and UAE were urged to register their presence. The UK announced a "visa brake" on Skilled Worker visas for citizens of Afghanistan, and Student visas for citizens of Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar, and Sudan from March 26, 2026.

Australia (DFAT/Smartraveller): Issued "Do Not Travel" advisories for Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Kuwait, Lebanon, Palestine, Qatar, Syria, UAE, and Yemen. Australian embassies in Israel and the UAE remain closed. Non-essential Australian officials were directed to leave Israel, Lebanon, and the UAE. All dependants of Australian officials have left the Middle East.

Embassies closed across 8 Arab states as multiple countries withdrew diplomatic staff.

Airline Cancellations — Comprehensive Status

More than 30,000 flights have been cancelled since the conflict began. Key airline statuses as of March 14:

  • Emirates: Operating reduced timetable until further notice
  • Etihad: Limited flight schedule from March 6
  • Qatar Airways: Limited schedule to/from Doha; partial resumption from March 9
  • British Airways: Flights to Amman, Bahrain, Doha, Dubai, Tel Aviv suspended; Abu Dhabi flights suspended "until later this year"
  • Lufthansa Group: Tel Aviv suspended until April 2; Tehran until April 30; Dubai/Abu Dhabi/Dammam until March 15
  • KLM: All Dubai flights cancelled through March 28; Riyadh/Dammam until March 12
  • Air France: Tel Aviv/Beirut through March 15; Dubai/Riyadh until March 14
  • Delta, American, United: Middle East services broadly suspended

Dubai Airport (DXB) and Abu Dhabi Airport (AUH) were struck by drones on March 11, injuring four people.

Infrastructure Strikes Affecting Business

Data Centres and Tech Infrastructure

Amazon Web Services data centres in the UAE and Bahrain were struck by Iranian drones in what analysts called "a new kind of war" targeting digital infrastructure. The strikes signal an escalation in targeting civilian tech assets that underpin global AI and cloud services.

Ports and Shipping

DP World's Jebel Ali Port in Dubai, one of the world's busiest container ports, suspended operations after a fire caused by "aerial interception."

Strait of Hormuz — Effective Closure

The Strait of Hormuz, through which approximately 20% of global oil and 25% of global fertiliser trade flows, has effectively shut down. Vessel traffic fell to just one transit on March 12. Iran has reportedly laid mines in the strait, making passage extremely dangerous.

The International Energy Agency took the unusual step of announcing a release of 400 million barrels from strategic reserves. Maritime war-risk insurance premiums surged by over 1,000% — hull war risk for a $75 million tanker jumped from $625,000 to $7.5 million.

Energy and LNG

Qatar cut 50% of the workforce at a major LNG project and halted LNG exports from its largest facility for the first time in three decades.

Workforce Impacts

Mass Workforce Displacement

An estimated 35 million low-skilled migrant workers across GCC countries face evacuation barriers due to confiscated passports, employer-tied visas (kafala system), and limited consular support.

Indian workers in the UAE, numbering approximately 3.5 million, face acute job risks as companies shutter operations. Many are navigating visa and employment uncertainty as the conflict intensifies.

Remote Work Mandates

Kuwait capped on-site workforce at 30% and mandated rotational remote work "until further notice" — a sweeping measure affecting both public and private sectors.

UK employers face complex workforce management challenges including managing stranded employees, pay and attendance implications for those unable to return, and global mobility risks from employees working from different jurisdictions.

Economic Ripple Effects

Oil and Energy Prices

Oil prices surged as the Strait of Hormuz closure cut off approximately 20 million barrels per day of crude, condensate, and fuels that typically transit the waterway. Fertiliser prices spiked — urea at New Orleans rose from $475 to $680 per metric ton, threatening Midwest planting season costs.

Supply Chain

Approximately 85% of polyethylene from the Middle East relies on the Hormuz route. Shortages will drive up costs for packaging, components, and consumer goods. Shipping reroutes are extending delivery times by 1-10+ days and raising costs by 5-20%.

Tourism and Hospitality

Dubai's status as a safe haven for wealthy expatriates and investors is being fundamentally challenged. Property, finance, and luxury hospitality sectors face prolonged uncertainty.

Other Active Conflicts Affecting Business

Ukraine-Russia (Year 4)

Russia's economy has stagnated and may enter technical recession. GDP growth slowed to 1% in 2025, and the IMF forecasts just 0.8% for 2026. Key indicators include consumer spending growth falling to zero, new car sales dropping 38%, and the central bank key rate at 15.5%, stifling private investment. Oil revenue halved amid sanctions, forcing Russia to sell at steep discounts.

Red Sea / Houthi Threats

The Red Sea corridor sits in "fragile equilibrium." The Houthis have announced they will resume attacks on ships, directly linked to the Iran escalation. Only ~18.7% of east-to-west shipments transit the canal, versus ~80% pre-disruption. The risk of a "double chokepoint" scenario — simultaneous Hormuz and Red Sea closures — is now a real concern.

Sudan Civil War (Year 3)

Nearly 3 years into the conflict, 25 million people face acute food shortages and 12+ million are displaced. Infrastructure destruction is comprehensive, with all 62 universities facing severe disruption affecting 600,000 students and 20,000 staff.

Myanmar Civil War (Year 5)

Five years since the military coup, Myanmar faces one of the world's most complex humanitarian crises. Nearly 4 million are internally displaced, with businesses facing sudden curfews, martial law, internet blackouts, and supply chain disruptions.

Sources & References

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office-closurestravel-advisoriesiran-conflictgulf-statesbusiness-disruptionworkforce-displacement

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