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Europe's aviation regulator issues brand-new cautioning for Russian airspace

The European Union Aviation Safety Firm issued a brand-new alert on Thursday caution nonEuropean providers not to fly within western Russia airspace due to the risk of being accidentally targeted by its airdefence systems.

Russia's civil air travel authority, Rosaviatsiya, denounced the alert as a brand-new imposition of sanctions on Russian companies and an attempt to enable Western airlines to recover lost markets.

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

The ongoing conflict following the Russian intrusion of Ukraine poses the danger of civil aircraft being unintentionally targeted in the airspace of the Russian Federation due to possible civil-military coordination deficiencies, and the potential for misidentification, EASA stated.

EASA recommends not to run within the impacted airspace of the Russian Federation situated west of longitude 60 ° East at all altitudes and flight levels.

The warning was for third-country operators authorised by EASA, considered that Russian airspace has been closed to European Union airline companies given that the bloc imposed Ukraine-related sanctions targeting Russia's air travel sector.

A statement issued on Friday by Rosaviatsiya said air security was its greatest top priority and the suggestion was baseless.

This recommendation is absolutely nothing more than an extension of the policy of sanctions by Western nations on the Russian Federation's air travel market, it wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

EASA, it stated, was trying to protect a reduction in the number of flights by Asian carriers to EU destinations using the Trans-Siberian route.

EASA, through this suggestion, is simply trying to recover its lost competitive advantage for its business, it stated.

4 sources with knowledge of the preliminary findings of Azerbaijan's investigation informed Reuters last month that Russian air defences had incorrectly shot down the airliner. Guests said they heard a loud bang outside the airplane.

President Vladimir Putin apologised to Azerbaijan's leader for what the Kremlin called a tragic event although the Kremlin declaration did not say Russia had actually shot down the plane, noting just that a criminal case had been opened.

(source: Reuters)