Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Russians put freeze on all flights to Egypt

Concern after fatal airliner crash

- ANDREW OSBORN and POLINA DEVITT

MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin ordered the suspension of all Russian passenger flights to Egypt yesterday until the cause of a deadly plane crash last weekend was establishe­d.

Putin’s decision was a response to the crash of an Airbus A321 operated by a Russian carrier last Saturday over Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula. All 224 people on board died.

The move, which follows decisions by Britain and others to suspend flights to and from Sharm al-Sheikh, the Egyptian resort where the Russian airliner originated, may be the first sign that Moscow is attaching credibilit­y to the theory that Islamist militants planted a bomb on the aircraft.

However, the Kremlin said the decision did not mean the crash was caused in a terrorist attack.

The Kremlin has said it is too early to say what caused the crash and that all theories, including the possibilit­y of technical failure, should be examined by the official investigat­ion. Egypt has also said it is too early to conclude a blast had brought down the plane.

Putin acted after Alexander Bortnikov, the head of Russia’s FSB security service, recom- mended that Russia suspend all passenger flights to Egypt until it knew what caused the crash.

“The head of state agreed with these recommenda­tions,” Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s spokesman, was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.

He said the government would find a way to bring Russians back home and would open talks with Egyptian authoritie­s to guarantee flight safety.

A Sinai-based group affiliated with the Islamic State, the militants who have seized swathes of Iraq and Syria, has claimed responsibi­lity for the crash, which if confirmed would make it the jihadist organisati­on’s first attack on civil aviation.

Britain has said a bomb planted by an IS affiliate may have caused the jet to crash and also suspended regular flights to Sharm al-Sheikh amid concerns over airport security. Ireland, Germany and the Netherland­s also suspended flights to the resort.

Egypt is one of the most popular holiday destinatio­ns for Russians and any decision to suspend flights would cause major logistical problems for Russia’s airlines and tourists.

Tourist agency Tez Tour, which estimates it sells about 15 percent of trips to Egypt from Russia, said 10 000 of its Russian clients were in Egypt.

“How are they (the authoritie­s) going to bring people back? If people are at a resort and they come to them to say a plane was sent to take you back, they would say: no, we want to be on holiday for two more weeks, we’re not going anywhere. An evacuation order would be needed,” said Vladimir Kaganer, general director of Tez Tour.

British attempts to bring home thousands of stranded tourists were thrown into chaos yesterday when Egypt reduced the number of flights it would allow to take them home.

Egypt’s minister of civil aviation, Hossam Kamal, said the operation to take large numbers of British holidaymak­ers from their hotels to the airport and then put them on flights without their luggage was “a huge burden on the airport because its capacity does not allow for that”.

The fate of Egypt’s tourist industry, a vital source of hard currency for a struggling economy, is at stake.

So too is the credibilit­y of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s claims to have brought under control militants fighting to topple his government. – Reuters

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