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Europe's air travel regulator concerns brand-new warning for Russian airspace

The European Union Air Travel Security Agency released a new alert on Thursday caution nonEuropean providers not to fly within western Russia airspace due to the threat of being unintentionally targeted by its air defence systems.

EASA stated the crash last month in Kazakhstan of an Azerbaijan Airlines airplane, after Russian air defences fired against Ukrainian drones, showed the high risk at play. At least 38 people passed away in the crash.

The continuous dispute following the Russian invasion of Ukraine presents the danger of civil airplane being accidentally targeted in the airspace of the Russian Federation due to possible civil-military coordination shortages, and the potential for misidentification, EASA said.

EASA recommends not to run within the affected airspace of the Russian Federation located west of longitude 60 ° East at all elevations and flight levels.

The warning was for third-country operators authorised by EASA, provided Russian airspace has been closed to European Union airlines because the bloc enforced Ukraine-related sanctions targeting Russia's air travel sector.

Four sources with understanding of the initial findings of Azerbaijan's investigation told Reuters last month that Russian air defences had wrongly shot the airliner down. Guests stated they heard a loud bang outside the aircraft.

President Vladimir Putin apologised to Azerbaijan's leader for what the Kremlin called a terrible incident although the Kremlin statement did not state Russia had actually shot down the aircraft, just noting that a criminal case had actually been opened.

(source: Reuters)