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Iceland Volcano Strands Hundreds Of Armenians In Europe

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  • Iceland Volcano Strands Hundreds Of Armenians In Europe

    ICELAND VOLCANO STRANDS HUNDREDS OF ARMENIANS IN EUROPE

    Asbarez
    Apr 20th, 2010

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-Hundreds of Armenian nationals remain stranded at
    airports across Europe because of the huge cloud of volcanic ash
    hanging over the continent, Armenia's civil aviation authority said
    on Tuesday.

    According to the Armenian government's Civil Aviation Department,
    a total of 17 flights from Yerevan to several major European cities
    have been cancelled since an incessant stream of ash from an Icelandic
    volcano forced the closure of much of European airspace on April 15.

    The Czech national airline CSA carried out on Monday the first flight
    to Armenia since the unprecedented disruption. Aram Marutian, the
    deputy head of the Civil Aviation Department, told RFE/RL's Armenian
    service that 140 mostly Armenian passengers arrived in Yerevan on
    board a CSA plane from Prague.

    Marutian said another carrier, Austrian Airlines, will also likely
    resume its regular flight service between Vienna and Yerevan later on
    Tuesday. "We are working with the airline to make sure that they use
    a bigger aircraft so that we can increase the number of passengers
    and return everyone to Armenia as soon as possible," he said.

    In Marutian's words, a total of some 750 Armenians are still unable to
    return home, while more than a 1,100 others have had to delay trips
    to Europe and the United States because of the crisis. About one
    third of them have handed back their air tickets to travel, he added.

    The official also said that the volcanic eruption has not disrupted
    flight services with Russia and other former Soviet republics which
    account for most of air travel to and from Armenia.

    Millions of people have been stranded across the globe since Europe
    began shutting down airspace six days ago. A gradual reopening of
    airports in northern and central Europe, which began on Monday, was
    called into question by new spurts of ash from the Eyjafjallajokull
    volcano reported on Tuesday. Authorities in Iceland said the volcanic
    activity there is still "considerable," leading some countries,
    including Britain and Norway, to scrap plans to end their lockdown.
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