Moscow Bans Egyptian National Carrier From Flying to Russia

MOSCOW— Russia’s state aviation agency on Friday banned Egypt’s national carrier from flying to Russia, a move that follows the suspension of all Russian flights to Egypt after a deadly crash.The agency, Rosaviatsiya, on Friday formally notified Mosc...
Moscow Bans Egyptian National Carrier From Flying to Russia
People look at an information board with flight arrival times in Domodedovo airport in Moscow, Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
The Associated Press
11/13/2015
Updated:
11/13/2015

MOSCOW— Russia’s state aviation agency on Friday banned Egypt’s national carrier from flying to Russia, a move that follows the suspension of all Russian flights to Egypt after a deadly crash.

The agency, Rosaviatsiya, on Friday formally notified Moscow’s Domodedovo airport, where EgyptAir flights arrive, that the ban is effective starting Saturday, said airport spokesman Alexander Vlasov.

The aviation agency didn’t give any immediate reason for the ban on flights, and Egypt’s aviation authorities said they haven’t been notified officially of this decision.

The Russian move follows Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to suspend all Russian flights to Egypt after the Oct. 31 crash of a Russian passenger jet in Egypt that killed all 224 people on board. Moscow said the ban was necessary because of concerns about security at Egypt’s airports.

EgyptAir, which runs three direct flights to Moscow a week, said on its official Twitter account that Saturday’s flight to Moscow has been canceled after official notification from Moscow’s airport. It has rebooked passengers who were on that flight to other flights from Cairo.

The company said officials were seeking to verify the status of upcoming flights and to clarify the reasons behind the Russian decision.

U.S. and British officials have cited intelligence reports indicating that the plane was brought down by a bomb on board shortly after it took off from Egypt’s Sharm al-Sheikh en route to St. Petersburg.

But Russia and Egypt said the statements were premature as the official crash probe has not concluded.

The flight ban, however, suggests that Russia takes the prospect exceptionally seriously.

On Tuesday, President Vladimir Putin’s chief of staff, Sergei Ivanov, said the flight ban will last for at least several months, a severe blow to Egypt’s struggling tourism industries that depend on Russian tourists for a large share of their revenue.

On Friday, Russia’s national flag carrier, Aeroflot, said it will not fly to Egypt until March 27.