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ANKARA: Armenian plane en route to Aleppo searched in Turkey

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  • ANKARA: Armenian plane en route to Aleppo searched in Turkey

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 15 2012


    Armenian plane en route to Aleppo searched in Turkey


    15 October 2012 / TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH REUTERS, Ä°STANBUL

    Turkey grounded an Armenian plane flying to the Syrian city of Aleppo
    and searched its cargo on Monday, in the latest move to prevent its
    airspace from being used to supply the Syrian military.




    The plane was allowed to continue on its way after the search in the
    eastern Turkish city of Erzurum confirmed it was carrying humanitarian
    aid as stated by Armenian officials, a Turkish deputy prime minister
    said.

    Last Wednesday Turkey forced a Syrian airliner to land that had come
    from Moscow and officials reported finding Russian munitions on board
    destined for Syria's armed forces.

    NATO member Turkey has become increasingly assertive in challenging
    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the face of growing tensions along
    the border and banned all Syrian aircraft from its airspace in the
    wake of that incident.

    Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç said the plane was given
    the all clear and allowed to continue on its journey.

    A Foreign Ministry spokesman said Turkey has the sovereign right under
    the Chicago Convention on International Civil Aviation to require
    planes crossing its airspace to make a "technical landing" but did not
    say whether this right would be exercised again in the future.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu said later in the day that
    according to preliminary inspections, the plane was not carrying any
    cargo except humanitarian aid supplies.

    DavutoÄ?lu, who is attending the 20th Meeting of the Council of
    Ministers (COM) of the Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO) in
    Azerbaijan, told journalists that on Oct. 10, Armenia requested the
    use of Turkish airspace to take humanitarian aid to Aleppo. He said
    Turkey had granted permission only on the condition that the plane
    would make a "technical landing" in Erzurum, a request in keeping with
    international aviation law.

    Armenia confirmed it had known the plane would be searched.

    "The landing of the airplane in Turkey was planned and it was carried
    out according to a previously reached agreement. The airplane is
    delivering humanitarian aid to Syria," Armenian Foreign Ministry
    spokesman Tigran Balayan said.

    Last week's decision to force down and search the Syrian plane
    traveling from Russia infuriated Moscow and Damascus.

    Russia has said there were no weapons on the plane and that it was
    carrying a legal cargo of radar equipment. But Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov later said the incident would not hurt the country's "solid"
    relations with Turkey.

    "I assure you, nobody should worry about the state of Russian-Turkish
    relations," state-run Russian news agency RIA quoted Sergei Lavrov as
    saying in Luxembourg on Sunday. "They are developing on a stable and
    solid foundation," he said.

    DavutoÄ?lu said over the weekend that Turkish airspace had been closed
    to Syrian planes. Syria has also banned Turkish planes from flying
    over its territory.

    The confrontation between Turkey and Syria has escalated in the last
    two weeks because of cross-border shelling, with Ankara retaliating
    after five Turkish civilians were killed when a Syrian shell hit a
    Turkish border town.

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