Chattanooga Times Free Press

Virgin Atlantic fined for flights over Iraqi airspace

- BY KELLY YAMANOUCHI THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

Virgin Atlantic faces a $1 million fine from the U.S. government for flying through Iraqi airspace when that was prohibited by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion because of heightened fears of conflict.

The U.S. Department of Transporta­tion said Virgin Atlantic, a code-share partner of Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines, operated “a significan­t number of flights” that carried the Delta code between the U.K. and India over restricted airspace in Iraq between Sept. 16, 2020 and Sept. 16, 2021.

The FAA notified pilots in March 2020 of a prohibitio­n on flights in the Baghdad area at all altitudes due to “heightened militia activities and increased tensions in Iraq.” The notificati­on came in the form of a Notice to Air Missions, which is also the FAA system that had an outage causing thousands of flight delays last week.

The prohibitio­n via NOTAM remained in place until Oct. 22, 2021. A separate prohibitio­n on flying in Baghdad airspace remains in effect below a certain altitude, and lasts until Oct. 26, 2024, because of “continuing hazards” in the area.

Virgin Atlantic is subject to the U.S. restrictio­ns and penalties because the flights were part of a partnershi­p with Delta.

The British carrier is part of a joint venture with Delta, Air France and KLM, one of a number of foreign partnershi­ps Delta relies on to connect passengers to destinatio­ns around the globe.

The U.S. Department of Transporta­tion said Virgin Atlantic should have avoided airspace restricted by the FAA when operating flights that have Delta’s “DL” code on it. Codeshares allow a Delta passenger, for example, to easily book an itinerary from Atlanta to London, to connect to a Virgin Atlantic flight to destinatio­ns in Europe or beyond.

While the DOT is levying a $1.05 million fine against Virgin Atlantic, $525,000 of it can be mitigated if the airline makes its payments when due and does not violate a cease-and-desist provision.

Virgin Atlantic said it corrected its routings as soon as it was notified of the issue by the DOT. It pointed blame at “operationa­l disruption­s and loss of personnel due to the COVID-19 pandemic” for the inadverten­t overflight­s, according to a consent order.

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