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France, Belgium publish lists of [UNKNOWN] ~Qunsafe~R airlines

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  • France, Belgium publish lists of [UNKNOWN] ~Qunsafe~R airlines

    France, Belgium publish lists of 'QunsafeR' airlines
    (AFP)

    Agence France Presse
    Aug 29 2005

    PARIS - Acting in response to a series of civil aviation disasters,
    both France and Belgium published on Monday a list of airlines banned
    from their airspace for safety reasons.

    France said it had banned five passenger carriers, and Belgium nine
    cargo companies.

    The action had the full support of the European Commission, which is
    trying to implement an EU-wide list of suspect airlines that pools
    safety information from all 25 member states.

    The announcement of the name-and-shame policy follows a string of
    fatal accidents this month, including a crash on August 16 that killed
    160 people in Venezuela, almost all of them French tourists from the
    Caribbean island of Martinique.

    Fatal crashes have also occurred this month near Athens and off the
    coast of Sicily.

    The initiative brings France and Belgium into line with Britain,
    Switzerland and the United States, where authorities have either
    identified banned airlines or named countries where civil aviation
    regulations are deemed to be inadequate.

    But some in the industry have criticised the proposal, saying the only
    way to improve security is to increase inspections and put pressure
    on foreign civil aviation authorities to enforce more stringent
    safety regulations.

    Many tour operators in France were skeptical about the blacklists,
    noting that many of the companies were unknown, and had never even
    asked to fly to France.

    "This list is a mistake because it leads one to believe that companies
    not on the list are not risky, which is false," said Jean-Pierre Mas,
    president of Afat-Voyages.

    "Furthermore, no carrier that has had an accident since 2004 is on
    the French list," added Mas.

    Maxime Coffin, director of security and control at DGAC, France's
    civil aviation authority, said he accepted that the list was "not a
    universal response or a panacea" to security fears after five aviation
    disasters in the last month.

    "Putting companies on a list is not enough to avoid all accidents,"
    said Coffin, but by being more transparent, we are improving the
    information available to passengers and its a way for each state to
    strengthen control over its airlines."

    Coffin said the lists would also accelerate Europe-wide efforts to
    monitor the issue.

    Of the combined 14 airlines banned by France and Belgium, seven
    are African.

    The publication of the lists prompted an admission from African Air
    safety regulator ASECNA, that the continent had a dearth of expertise
    in the area of airline safety.

    "This lack of expertise concerns the technical and commercial viability
    of carriers and it's the same for every country in Africa," said
    Amadou Ousmane, head of ASECNA, which includes 17 mainly francophone
    African countries and France and is based in Dakar.

    Ousmane said he believed the publication of the lists was a good thing,
    commenting that air accidents in Africa occur because companies get
    around the safety inspections and regulations.

    "It will let the public know that it's not safe to take any old
    company," he said.

    For Thai carrier Phuket Airlines, which recently had one of its planes
    impounded at South Korea's Incheon International Airport amid a row
    over maintenance and service fees, the publication of the French list,
    on which it figures, was the latest blow.

    "We don't know what is the reason and what is the meaning to
    justify that we are unsafe," said airline vice-president Chawanit
    Chiamcharoenvut.

    "But we have to accept their decision... and improve our safety and
    maintenance."

    The list of outlawed carriers, which appear on the web sites of the
    French and Belgian civil aviation authorities, are as follows.

    France: Air Koryo from North Korea; Air Saint-Thomas from the United
    States; International Air Service from Liberia; Air Mozambique
    (LAM) along with affiliated carrier Transairways; and Phuket Airways
    of Thailand, which had not previously been named by the transport
    ministry.

    Belgium: Africa Lines (Central African Republic); Air Memphis (Egypt);
    Air Van Airlines (Armenia); Central Air Express (Democratic Republic of
    the Congo); ICTTPW (Libya); International Air Tours Limited (Nigeria);
    Johnsons Air Limited (Ghana); Silverback Cargo Freighters (Rwanda);
    and South Airlines (Ukraine).
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