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Russian Top Prosecutor Lashes Out At Russian Airlines Over Safety Co

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  • Russian Top Prosecutor Lashes Out At Russian Airlines Over Safety Co

    RUSSIAN TOP PROSECUTOR LASHES OUT AT RUSSIAN AIRLINES OVER SAFETY CONCERNS

    MosNews, Russia
    Oct 3 2006

    The Prosecutor General said Monday that Russian airlines use fake
    and substandard parts and operate without the necessary safety and
    security checks, Russian news agencies reported.

    The comments by Yury Chaika came after a slew of crashes this year
    that have claimed more than 400 lives and cast a harsh light on the
    decrepit state of many of the nation's airlines, The Associated Press
    reports. "Flight security is extremely poor," Chaika was quoted
    as saying by the Itar-Tass news agency. "The aircraft accidents,
    which have lately become increasingly frequent, engender fears in
    our society and distrust of the Russian air carriers. They greatly
    impair the country's prestige too," he said.

    In August, a Tu-154 jet belonging to Pulkovo Airlines crashed in
    Ukraine after encountering a storm, killing all 170 people aboard. In
    July, an Airbus A310 belonging to airline S7 skidded off a runway and
    burst into flames in the Siberian city of Irkutsk, killing 124 people.

    An A320 belonging to the Armenian airline Armavia crashed into the
    Black Sea while trying to land in the resort city of Sochi in May,
    killing all 113 people aboard.

    Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov called for tougher legislation
    to regulate the nation's many airlines, many of which lack the cash
    to overhaul their Soviet-era fleets.

    "We must start work to enlarge companies or create alliances, as well
    as enshrine in law the responsibilities of the aviation industry,
    repair plants and airlines," he was quoted by the RIA-Novosti news
    agency as saying.

    In an effort to upgrade Russia's pool of antiquated aircraft VAT
    needed to first be reduced on domestically made planes, after which
    customs duties needed to be cut on models that aren't made in Russia,
    Ivanov said.

    "First the domestic industry, then the imports," he said. Ivanov
    called for cutting out the intermediary companies selling parts and
    recommended raising payouts to crash victims to a minimum $75,000
    (euro59,125).

    Ivanov - who is also defense minister and was appointed to oversee
    air safety in August - said that companies were turning a blind eye to
    safety violations, in an effort to keep costs down. "Sometimes matters
    of business, of commercial gain, are put before air safety," he said.

    Transport Minister Igor Levitin, meanwhile, targeted corrupt officials
    under whose aegis struggling and decrepit airlines are able to
    continue operating, despite the violations. "In the course of the
    inspection it became clear that competing firms are using illicit
    tactics bordering on the criminal," he was quoted as saying by the
    NTV television channel. "This is taking place under the control of
    negligent officials," he said.
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