DEAL ALLOWS ALL ALL EU AIRLINES TO TRAVEL TO ARMENIA
Monsters and Critics.com
Dec 9 2008
Brussels - The European Union has signed an aviation agreement with
Armenia allowing any European airline to fly to and from the Asian
republic, officials in Brussels said Tuesday.
The deal, which caps three years of negotiations, replaces a set of
bilateral arrangements agreed by Armenia with some of the EU's 27
member states.
'The agreement recognizes that airlines in the EU are not any longer
national airlines, and all of them will thus have non- discriminatory
access to the air transport market between the EU and Armenia,'
EU Transport Commissioner Antonio Tajani said.
EU External Affairs Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner said
facilitating transport links represents 'a crucial and very visible
component in our policy to enhance people-to-people contacts and
improve business links between the EU and Armenia.'
The EU expects the deal to lead to further increase in passengers
numbers between the EU and Armenia. These increased from 166,000 in
2006 to 204,000 in 2007.
Monsters and Critics.com
Dec 9 2008
Brussels - The European Union has signed an aviation agreement with
Armenia allowing any European airline to fly to and from the Asian
republic, officials in Brussels said Tuesday.
The deal, which caps three years of negotiations, replaces a set of
bilateral arrangements agreed by Armenia with some of the EU's 27
member states.
'The agreement recognizes that airlines in the EU are not any longer
national airlines, and all of them will thus have non- discriminatory
access to the air transport market between the EU and Armenia,'
EU Transport Commissioner Antonio Tajani said.
EU External Affairs Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner said
facilitating transport links represents 'a crucial and very visible
component in our policy to enhance people-to-people contacts and
improve business links between the EU and Armenia.'
The EU expects the deal to lead to further increase in passengers
numbers between the EU and Armenia. These increased from 166,000 in
2006 to 204,000 in 2007.