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UPDATE: EU to seal off skies to Belarusian air traffic

24th May 2021 21:02

(Alliance News) - The EU is to seal off its airspace and airports to Belarusian airlines after a flight between two EU states was forcibly diverted to Minsk, the European Council president's spokesperson announced on Twitter on Monday evening.

Belarussian state airline Belavia will likely have to cancel its flights to a host of cities, including to Berlin, Paris, and Brussels.

Arrested Belarussian opposition blogger Roman Protasevich, who was on the diverted Ryanair flight, says he is cooperating and admitting to charges of organising protests in a video circulated by state TV channels on Monday.

"I am in Detention Centre no 1 in Minsk. I can say that I have no health problems, including with my heart or any other organs," Protasevich said in the clip that appears to have been filmed on a phone camera.

The 26-year-old is wearing a black hoodie and sits behind a table in a non-descript room with a pack of cigarettes by his side.

The British government earlier Monday said it had issued instructions for UK aircraft to avoid Belarusian airspace and slapped a ban on the country's flag carrier Belavia.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said he had told the Civil Aviation Authority to issue instructions "in order to keep passengers safe". He also suspended the operating permit of Belavia, which flies daily London Gatwick to Minsk flights via Paris in a code-share with Air France.

A senior Belarus transport official said that the country had received a bomb threat claiming to be from Hamas ahead of the diversion of a Ryanair passenger flight carrying a dissident.

Artem Sikorsky, the head of the aviation department at the transport and communications ministry, read out a letter to journalists that said: "We, the soldiers of Hamas, demand that Israel cease fire in the Gaza Strip. We demand that the EU renounces its support for Israel in this war... A bomb is planted on this flight. If you do not fulfil our demands, the bomb will explode over Vilnius on May 23."

Germany said it had summoned the Belarusian ambassador over the forced landing of an airliner and detention of a critical journalist.

"The explanations of the Belarusian government for the forced landing of a Ryanair plane in Minsk are absurd and not credible," Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said in a statement.

Scandinavian airline SAS Group said it would avoid Belarusian airspace.

The announcement by SAS followed a recommendation from the Transport Agency calling on Swedish airlines to consider avoiding Belarus airspace.

"This recommendation is in effect until the situation and issue has stabilised. We are closely monitoring the developments," said Simon Posluk, the agency's head of maritime and aviation traffic.

European nations were demanding answers after Belarusian authorities dispatched a fighter jet to force a Ryanair flight to divert to Minsk, where a dissident journalist who was on board was then arrested.

Ryanair Holdings PLC said its plane was flying from Greece to Lithuania on Sunday when it was notified of "a potential security threat on board" by air traffic controllers in Belarus and told to divert to Minsk for an emergency landing.

The airline said the plane landed safely in Belarusian capital and "nothing untoward was found" after passengers were offloaded and an inspection took place.

But authorities at the airport used the opportunity to arrest Roman Protasevich, a Belarusian journalist and opposition activist, who was a passenger, according to state media and the rights group Viasna.

The opposition news outlet Nexta also confirmed the arrest of Protasevich, the organization's co-founder and former editor who has been living in exile.

Governments across Europe reacted with the outrage, suggesting authoritarian Belarus used the pretext of a safety threat to conduct a "state hijacking" of a civilian airliner in order to go after a critic.

Belarusian state media reported that the plane's diversion came on the personal instructions of long-time President Alexander Lukashenko after he had purportedly been alerted to a possible bomb on board and was concerned about the plane's safety.

He also ordered a MiG-29 fighter jet be scrambled to accompany the Ryanair plane, according to the Belta state news agency.

Lukashenko, 66, has led Belarus - a former Soviet republic in Eastern Europe bordering EU states Poland, Lithuania and Latvia - for more than a quarter of a century, tolerating little dissent.

Mass protests against his rule erupted after a presidential election last year that was widely seen as unfair and rife with electoral fraud.

Belarus calls Nexta an extremist organization and Protasevich has been wanted by authorities. Nexta had urged on the protests against Lukashenko.

Lukashenko has long considered Protasevich to be an enemy. The country's KGB secret service had reportedly put his name on a list of people accused of alleged terrorism and he faces years in prison if convicted.

Condemnation of Belarus came swiftly on Sunday, with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg calling for an international investigation and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen saying the "utterly unacceptable" incident "must bear consequences."

The US demanded Protasevich be immediately released. Secretary of State Antony Blinken strongly condemned the forced diversion and Protasevich's arrest.

"This shocking act perpetrated by the Lukashenka regime endangered the lives of more than 120 passengers, including US citizens," Blinken said in a statement.

The 27 EU leaders will discuss Belarus during a previously scheduled summit in Brussels on Monday, including the possibility of imposing sanctions on Minsk, a spokesperson for EU Council President Charles Michel said.

Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda tweeted that Belarus had committed an "abhorrent action" and demanded the release of Protasevich.

The Lithuanian Prosecutor-General's Office said the country has launched a preliminary investigation into the jet's forced diversion.

The Greek Foreign Ministry said it "strongly condemns the state hijacking", while Britain, Germany, France, Poland, Austria, Norway, Sweden, and the Netherlands were among the chorus denouncing Minsk.

Ryanair Flight FR4978 was en route from Athens to the Lithuanian capital Vilnius when it was ordered to land in Minsk.

Former Belarusian culture minister Pavel Latushko, who lives in exile in the EU, said, citing his contacts, that the flight control centre in Minsk threatened the pilots with shooting down the plane if they did not land.

Greece and Lithuania put the number of passengers on board at 171, although Ryanair has not provided a figure. Lithuania said most of the passengers were Lithuanian nationals. Belarus had said the plane had 123 passengers.

The Irish low-cost airline said the plane spent seven hours on the ground in Minsk undergoing security checks before it was allowed to depart at 8:50 pm local time. It landed in Vilnius a little over 30 minutes later.

Ryanair made no mention of Protasevich in its statement.

Exiled Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who many in Belarus consider the true winner of the 2020 presidential election, urged the international community to punish Lukashenko.

source: dpa and AFP

Copyright 2021 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.


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