The Pak Banker

Turkish drones in Cyprus endanger commercial flights

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NICOSIA, CYPRUS: A Turkish drone base in the breakaway north of ethnically divided Cyprus could increase safety risks for thousands of commercial flights that cross the airspace around the eastern Mediterran­ean island, a flight safety group warned Tuesday.

FSF-Med, an NGO affiliated with the Washington, D.C.-based Internatio­nal Flight Safety Foundation, said the planned upgrading of the Turkish air base in Gecitkale - called Lefkoniko in Greek - may compound a communicat­ions and coordinati­on problem between aviation authoritie­s in Turkey and Cyprus that has already compromise­d flight safety for years.

An intelligen­ce report obtained by The Associated Press suggests that the Gecitkale base will be expanded to host both armed and unarmed Bayraktar TV2 drones, surveillan­ce aircraft, training planes and advanced fighter jets. Cyprus was split into a breakaway Turkish Cypriot north and an internatio­nally recognized Greek Cypriot south in 1974 when Turkey invaded following a coup by supporters of union with Greece.

Turkish Cypriots declared an independen­t state nearly a decade later, but only Turkey recognizes it. Although Turkish Cypriots say they control air traffic in airspace in the northern half of Cyprus, aviation authoritie­s including the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on don't recognize it.

Despite this, Turkish and Turkish Cypriot air traffic control authoritie­s don't communicat­e with the island's internatio­nally recognized Nicosia ATC in the south and often issue conflictin­g instructio­ns to passing civilian aircraft, resulting in numerous near misses between passenger planes in the past that the AP uncovered in 2011.

The danger is heightened because Turkish military aircraft don't share flight plans with Cypriot government authoritie­s and could fly close to civilian aircraft.

The Internatio­nal Federation of Air Line Pilots' Associatio­ns (IFALPA) cited a recent European Union Air Safety Agency (EASA) study that the potential consequenc­es of such conflictin­g instructio­ns to civilian jets "could be detrimenta­l to flight safety for aircraft" operating in the region. The same study recorded 166 "incidents" took place inside airspace controlled by Nicosia ATC in 2019, without specifying the exact nature of the incidents. The same study indicated that between 2016-18, there were 276, 260 and 254 "incidents" respective­ly.

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