SF Gate: Afghanistan's airline makes first international flight since 1999

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Thursday, January 24, 2002 (AP)
Afghanistan's airline makes first international flight since 1999



   (01-24) 02:29 PST KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) --
   Afghanistan's national carrier made its first international flight
Thursday in nearly 21/2 years, its lone Boeing 727 taking off from Kabul
to New Delhi -- after a worker clambered up a mobile stairway and used a
plastic jug to clean the windshield.
   It was the latest milestone in the struggle to get Ariana Afghan Airlines
off the ground again. Its international flights had been halted since
October 1999, following the imposition of anti-Taliban sanctions by the
United Nations.
   Those sanctions were lifted Jan. 13 by the Security Council.
   Even before the Taliban took over, Ariana had all but disappeared from t=
he
world aviation map. After the Soviet invasion in 1979, Ariana's operations
to Western countries were effectively halted, and travel to Afghanistan
dried up during the bloody 1992-96 civil war.
   As Afghanistan grew increasingly isolated under Taliban rule, Ariana flew
to only a few international destinations -- Tajikistan, the United Arab
Emirates, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
   Pilots have told of the airline's planes being used by the Taliban to
ferry weaponry and leaders of al-Qaida, the terror group whose suicide
squads allegedly hijacked four jetliners in the United States on Sept. 11.
   Thursday's flight carried a crew of 12 and 13 passengers, including
Afghanistan's tourism minister and the airline's president, taking off
into clear blue skies. It landed safely in New Delhi and passengers and
crew were greeted with garlands of marigolds.
   "I am very happy that our first flight was to our friendly country,
India," said Abdul Rahman, Afghanistan's civil aviation minister.
   Kabul's international airport, badly damaged during the U.S. bombing
campaign that began Oct. 7, reopened last week to international
humanitarian and military flights, although much damage remains to be
repaired. Ariana is the only carrier being allowed to use it for
commercial traffic.
   Ariana last month began making twice-a-week domestic runs to the western
city of Herat, initially using a taxiway for landings and takeoffs because
the main runway was unusable due to bomb craters.

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Copyright 2002 AP

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