An Aleppo-bound Armenian civilian plane was grounded for inspection in the eastern province of Erzurum on Oct. 15, as Turkey increases pressure against Syria, preventing its airspace from being used to supply the Syrian military.
Armenia
notified Turkish authorities of its willingness to send humanitarian
aid to Syria on Oct. 10, and the permission for safe conduct was granted
only on the condition of a technical landing, an official from the
Turkish Foreign Ministry told turkish daily post.
The plane was
permitted to depart yesterday afternoon after its cargo declaration was
verified, Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç told reporters. “That is
to say, we’re very serious on this issue. We are following closely, and
we are very diligent on our duty,” he said. “We won’t avert humanitarian
aid planes, but we’ll always perform the same practice for flights
aboard which the cargo is not clear,” Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu told reporters in Baku.
Case-by-case basis
The
grounding of the plane does not represent the implementation of a
general decision to ground Syria-bound planes, and decisions to make
technical inspections are made on a case-by-case basis, officials told
the Daily News.
Asked if Turkey
is applying a practice of inspection generally to all Syria-bound
planes flying through Turkish airspace, a Turkish diplomat said “It is
early to interpret that way,” implying that decisions to ground foreign
planes are made as needed. Turkish authorities and the Turkish media
tried to “make a show out of [the grounding of the plane]” despite the
previous agreement, Air Armenia Director Arsen Avetisyan told news.am.
The cargo aboard the Armenian jet included 14 tons of food.
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