Ukraine, neighbours close airspace to civilian flights as conflict
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[February 24, 2022]
By Jamie Freed and Tim Hepher
(Reuters) -Ukraine closed its airspace to
civilian flights on Thursday after Russia launched a land, sea and air
invasion of its neighbour, while Europe's aviation regulator warned
about hazards to flying in bordering regions.
Moldova, southwest of Ukraine, also closed its airspace, while Belarus
to the north said civilian flights could no longer fly over part of its
territory after Russian President Vladimir Putin authorised the military
operation.
Ukraine State Air Traffic Services Enterprise said on its website that
the country's airspace was closed to civilian flights from 0045 GMT on
Thursday. Air traffic services were suspended.
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) said airspace in Russia
and Belarus within 100 nautical miles of their borders with Ukraine
could also pose safety risks.
"In particular, there is a risk of both intentional targeting and
misidentification of civil aircraft," the agency said in a conflict zone
bulletin.
"The presence and possible use of a wide range of ground and airborne
warfare systems poses a high risk for civil flights operating at all
altitudes and flight levels."
The aviation industry has taken heightened notice of the risks conflicts
pose to civil aviation since Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down
over eastern Ukraine in 2014, when fighting in the region flared.
EASA said Russia's defence ministry had sent Ukraine an urgent message
warning of a high risk to flight safety, due to the use of weapons and
military equipment from 0045 GMT, and asked Ukraine's air traffic
control to stop flights.
Websites, which before the escalation had shown intelligence-gathering
flights over or near Ukraine as the West showcased support by
transmitting detectable signals in recent weeks, showed empty space on
Thursday as aircraft left and Ukraine was declared a conflict zone.
Early morning airline traffic skirted the whole country in crowded
corridors to the north and west.
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A woman looks on as a business jet airplane takes off in Kyiv,
Ukraine September 17, 2021. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich
An El Al flight from Tel Aviv to
Toronto made a sudden U-turn out of Ukraine's airspace around the
time of its closure, flight tracking website FlightRadar24 showed. A
LOT Polish Airlines flight from Warsaw to Kyiv turned back.
Safe Airspace, set up to provide safety and conflict zone
information after the downing of MH17, had hours earlier raised its
risk level over Ukraine to "do not fly."
It warned of the potential for a cyberattack on Ukraine's air
traffic control.
Russia said on Thursday it had suspended domestic flights to and
from several airports near its border with Ukraine, including
Rostov-on-Don, Krasnodar and Stavropol, until March 2.
Russia closed some airspace in the Rostov sector "in order to
provide safety" for civil flights, according to a notice to air
crew, known as a NOTAM.
Before Ukraine's announcement, Britain, Canada, France, Italy and
the United States told their airlines to avoid certain airspace
above eastern Ukraine and Crimea but stopped short of a total ban.
London-listed budget carrier Wizz Air said it was halting operations
out of Ukraine in an announcement released after Ukraine shut its
airspace. Germany's Lufthansa and KLM suspended flights days
earlier.
Two Ukrainian airlines said last week they had faced problems
securing insurance for some flights, as foreign carriers began
avoiding the airspace amid Russia's military build up on the border.
(Reporting by Jamie Freed in Sydney, Tim Hepher in Paris, Kate
Holton and Guy Faulconbridge in London, Maria Kiselyova in Moscow
and Alexander Tanas in ChisinauEditing by Clarence Fernandez, Edmund
Blair and Mark Potter)
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