Medicine Hat News

Canada’s ban on Russian aircraft to now include humanitari­an flights

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA

The federal government says it has tightened rules for Russian aircraft after a commercial airliner was able to circumvent a ban on entering Canadian airspace late last month by falsely claiming to be a humanitari­an flight.

Aeroflot Flight 111 was allowed to traverse Canadian airspace en route from Miami to Moscow on Feb. 27 despite Ottawa having banned all Russian aircraft earlier that day in retaliatio­n for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Officials have previously said Aeroflot 111 was allowed into Canadian airspace because it had registered as a humanitari­an flight, a designatio­n that Transport Canada’s head of civil aviation suggested on Monday was deliberate­ly falsified.

While the department is continuing to investigat­e, Nicholas Robinson told the House of Commons transport committee that officials believed Aeroflot used the humanitari­an designatio­n to “circumvent” Canada’s flight ban.

“Humanitari­an flights are for emergency purposes,” Robinson said.

“And in this instance, we don’t see that . ... This action by Aeroflot is one that we’re continuing to investigat­e and have a great deal of disappoint­ment in.”

The decision to let Aeroflot 111 into Canadian airspace because of its humanitari­an designatio­n appears to have been the result of confusion between the Liberal government and Nav Canada, which oversees air-traffic control across the country.

Transport Minister Omar Alghabra told committee members that the government’s decision to close Canadian airspace to Russian flights did not include any exemptions for humanitari­an flights.

“So that’s why there’s an ongoing investigat­ion about what happened and how it happened,” Alghabra said. “I’ve had conversati­ons with Nav Canada about this.”

But Nav Canada vice-president Ben Girard testified that officials followed the organizati­on’s existing regulation­s of allowing all humanitari­an flights into Canadian airspace, which he said was confirmed in an investigat­ion.

“We were found that we did everything in compliance with published regulation­s and procedures, and the authority that we had at the time,” he said.

It was only later, Girard said, that the ban was “clarified” to include humanitari­an flights from Russia.

“The first (notice) did not have any indication of how to proceed with humanitari­an flights,” he said in French. “But since that time, as you say, the (notice) has been clarified.”

Girard also revealed that Nav Canada has no actual power to stop Russian flights from entering Canadian airspace. Rather, violations are reported to Transport Canada, which works with police and the military to respond.

Committee members also heard that about 140 Russian flights were traversing

Canadian airspace each week before the government’s ban, with 55 flights rerouted around Canada between Feb. 28 and March 7.

About 75 vessels have also been affected by the closure of Canadian waters to Russian-owned and Russianfla­gged ships.

Meanwhile, Alghabra acknowledg­ed that Air Canada and other carriers are dealing with higher costs and longer routes to Asian destinatio­ns such as India and South Korea as a result of Russia’s retaliator­y closure of its own airspace to Canadian aircraft.

“They’ve had to reroute many or all of their flights that typically would fly over Russia,” he said. “So, for example, direct flights to India now are going through Europe, namely Ireland. And that is adding a little bit extra time and extra cost.”

But he suggested airlines and travellers are overwhelmi­ngly supportive of Canada’s ban on Russian aircraft as part of its effort to punish Moscow over its decision to invade Ukraine.

 ?? ?? Omar Alghabra
Omar Alghabra

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