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Russian commercial pilots ordered out of Iran

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  • Russian commercial pilots ordered out of Iran

    Russian commercial pilots ordered out of Iran

    06.03.2010 17:33 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iran has given Russian commercial pilots working in
    the Islamic Republic two months to leave the country as it has no need
    for them, Transport Minister Hamid Behbahani has been quoted as
    saying.

    The move is a further sign of strains between Iran and Russia, which
    has indicated it could back new sanctions against Tehran over its
    disputed nuclear work. For its part, Iran has voiced frustration over
    Moscow's failure to deliver a defense missile system.

    Iran's semiofficial Fars News Agency said the idea to order the
    Russian pilots to leave the country gained momentum after a
    Russian-made aircraft caught fire as it landed in northeastern Iran in
    January, injuring more than 40 people.

    The plane belonged to Iran's Taban airline but the pilot was Russian,
    Fars said. It did not say how many Russians currently worked as pilots
    for Iranian airlines.

    "Upon an order from the president [Mahmud Ahmadinejad], the Road and
    Transport Ministry has set a two-month deadline, upon the expiry of
    which all Russian pilots will have to leave the country," Behbahani
    said.

    "When our country itself possesses plenty of professional and
    specialist pilots, there is no need to bring in pilots from abroad,"
    he told Fars.

    Iran has suffered a string of crashes in the past few decades, many
    involving Russian-made aircraft.

    In 2009 a Tupolev aircraft flying to Armenia caught fire in midair and
    crashed, killing all 168 people on board.

    U.S. sanctions against Iran have prevented it from buying new aircraft
    or spare parts from the West, forcing it to supplement its ageing
    fleet of Boeing and Airbus planes with aircraft from Russia and other
    former Soviet states.

    Behbahani said about 120 aircraft out of 193 planes in Iran's
    commercial fleet were currently active, with the rest grounded for one
    reason or another.

    Russia, which has significant trade ties with Iran, is among six world
    powers trying to find a diplomatic solution to the long-running
    dispute over Tehran's nuclear program.

    Moscow has indicated it could support new sanctions against Iran
    provided they are not too severe. Iran denies Western accusations that
    its nuclear work is aimed at developing bombs.

    Iranian officials have voiced growing frustration at Russia's failure
    to supply the advanced S-300 missile defense system, which Israel and
    the United States do not want Tehran to have. Russia last month said
    it would not sell weapons if it leads to destabilization in any
    region, Reuters reported.
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