Iraqi Airways resumes international flights

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By Thomas Steinmetz

BAGHDAD (eTurbo News) -- Iraqi Airways will resumed
international flights this weekend after 14 years
being grounded by war and sanctions.

The airline said it will launch scheduled flights to
neighboring Syria and Jordan twice a week.  ?This is
the first step for Iraqi Airways. We hope to expand
our service to Dubai within weeks,? an airline
official said.

More international flights could boost Iraq?s
reconstruction by providing more travel alternatives
for businessmen and investors keen to avoid highways
plagued by bandits and gunmen.

However, with security in the country deteriorating,
and a wave of kidnapping of foreigners, many
foreigners still choose to come. Until now there have
only been a few daily commercial flights in and out of
Baghdad, almost all to Amman/Iraqi Airways says its
offices have already sold dozens of tickets, but at
prices the majority cannot afford. A return ticket to
Damascus would cost US$600, to Amman US$750. The same
trip by road costs about US$40.

After successfully performing a test flight from
Jordan in August, Iraqi Airways was initially denied
regular airspace permission to fly over Iraqi
territory, with doubts over licensing validity
stalling the process. But approval has now been
granted, meaning Iraqi Airways can compete with Royal
Jordanian which already has scheduled flights in and
out of Iraq. Despite the airlines optimism, it faces
many hurdles. Many of its financial assets have been
frozen since last year and only one of its 16 plane
fleet is currently fully-operational.

Fifteen of its planes were flown overseas, where they
were left to rust. The airline says the planes are
non-functioning and says it will send out repair
teams.

Domestic flights were barred by the no fly zones in
northern and southern Iraq set up by the USA and
Britain after the first Gulf war to protect rebellious
Kurds and Shies from Saddam Hussein army.

The sanctions forced the airline to turn to
maintenance work on other intl. planes to avoid
falling into bankruptcy.

?We were not allowed to fly. We turned our offices
into business centers and we turned to contractual
work in Libya, Jordan and Sudan,? said Isaac Esho, the
airline's deputy director general.

While many airlines have been reluctant to use BGD
intl. airport, fearing a disaster inevitable in a
country plagued by violence.  Iraqi Airways says an
attack on its planes is unlikely.  ?We're not scared.
Our aircraft will take the same security risk as all
the others, probably much less,? Esho said.

Iraqi Airways was formed in 1946. After Iraqis
invasion of Kuwait, UN sanctions imposed an economic
embargo in 1991 that left the airliner in ruins.
(with wire inputs)



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