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Jackals, lizards, raptors delay flights in India

Planes couldn't land or take off for more than an hour until animals cleared

Image: New Delhi airport
A jet moves on the runway at the New Delhi airport on Tuesday. About 100 flights were delayed after monitor lizards, jackals and birds strayed onto the runway after early monsoons hit the city.
Harish Tyagi / EPA

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updated 5:38 p.m. ET June 17, 2008

NEW DELHI - Jackals, monitor lizards and raptors descended on a runway at New Delhi's main airport after heavy rains Monday, delaying flights, an airport official said.

The animals were looking to dry off and warm up after the first monsoon rains hit India's capital, and their appearance on the runway forced authorities to stop planes from taking off and landing for about an hour, Indira Gandhi International Airport spokesman Arun Arora said in a statement.

Animal welfare authorities cleared the runway of wildlife, including monitor lizards that measured as long as 2-3 feet, Arora said.

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Arora didn't say how many flights were delayed. The Hindustan Times newspaper said about 100 flights were affected.

In the monsoon season, which runs from June to September, heavy rains routinely delay flights all over India.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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