Ryanair Calls On Belarus To Guarantee No Repeat Of Plane Diversion

By Dave Simpson
Ryanair Calls On Belarus To Guarantee No Repeat Of Plane Diversion

Ryanair has urged Belarus to guarantee that there will be no repeat of the forced landing of one of its flights last May, and said that airlines should not fly over Belarus without such a guarantee.

The plane was overflying Belarus on its way from Athens to Vilnius when Belarus controllers ordered it to land in Minsk, citing a bomb threat. Once it was on the ground, a Belarusian dissident journalist on board the plane was arrested along with his female companion.

Western powers responded with a wave of new sanctions and the United States this month charged four Belarus officials with aircraft piracy.

United Nations Report

A United Nations report published on 17 January found that the reported bomb threat had been invented, without identifying the source of the hoax. It said that Belarus had withheld crucial information from the UN fact-finding team.

Ryanair Group Head Statements

Ryanair Group head Michael O'Leary said that the airline supported the US action. He welcomed the UN report, though he said that it "could have gone further".

"I think it is fundamental to the future of air travel that we do not have a repetition of what in my mind was the first case since the Chicago Convention (1944) of a state sponsored act of international piracy," O'Leary told an investor call. "There should be no overflight of Belarus unless appropriate guarantees are obtained that this won't recur."

Belarus Statements

Belarus has said that it acted legally and in accordance with all international norms, and accused the west of using the episode to try to undermine President Alexander Lukashenko.

ICAO Statements

The UN's International Civil Aviation Organization's (ICAO) council said on Monday January 31 that some members of its governing council expressed concern at gaps in information provided by Belarus and inconsistencies contained in the evidence available at the time of the investigation.

The council asked the ICAO investigation team to continue trying to establish missing facts and to report any further findings, the agency said in a release.

News by Reuters, edited by Hospitality Ireland. Click subscribe to sign up for the Hospitality Ireland print edition.

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