Srinagar, May 13 -- Commercial flight operations will resume from Srinagar International Airport on Tuesday, six days after they were temporarily suspended due to the military standoff between India and Pakistan, airport director Javed Anjum said on Monday. Hajj pilgrimage flights will resume from Jammu and Kashmir on Wednesday, Anjum said. "We were ready to operate the airport from today (Monday) itself and conveyed this to the airlines, but they have to line up their aircraft and passengers. That is why they are starting from Tuesday," he said. Commercial flight operations at the airport were suspended on May 7 when India targeted terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir in response to the April 22 Pahalgam attack. Since the attack, the militaries of the two nations carried out missile and drone attacks on each other till a ceasefire was announced on Saturday evening. Srinagar is among 32 airports across the north and west of the country to resume civil operations after the Airports Authority of India gave the go-ahead. Hajj flights from Srinagar were also affected due to the closure of the airport. The first batch of 178 pilgrims from Jammu and Kashmir had left for Saudi Arabia on May 4 for the annual pilgrimage, but the authorities had to cancel seven flights of pilgrims that were to leave between May 7 and 12. Shujaat Ahmad Qureshi, the executive officer of the Jammu and Kashmir Hajj Committee, said: "There will be three flights on May 14 and 15 according to the schedule, while a new schedule willbe announced for the seven flights that were cancelled." This year, 3,622 pilgrims from Jammu and Kashmir and 242 from Ladakh are performing the Hajj pilgrimage. Srinagar airport was to operate 11 Hajj flights between May 4 and 15....