Experts see holes in international flight security rules,
oversight
An Air Canada plane flies underneath dark clouds
illuminated by some sun rays above Frankfurt, Germany, Thursday, March 2, 2017.
Some experts say the Iran plane crash points to a glaring gap in rules around
flight security, with states lacking incentives to close their own airspace and
global agencies lacking the authority to preempt future tragedies. THE CANADIAN
PRESS/AP-Frank Rumpenhorst/dpa via AP
MONTREAL - Questions about how
and when planes are permitted to fly have been raised in the aftermath of the
deadly crash of a Ukrainian airliner near Tehran last week that killed all 176
people on board.
Experts say the crash, which happened after the plane
was hit by an Iranian surface-to-air missile, points to a glaring gap in rules
around flight security, with countries sometimes failing to close their own
airspace amid a lack of authority by global agencies.
Transport Canada
said last week that Canadian carriers were complying with U.S.-led restrictions
on commercial flights in Iraqi, Iranian and some Persian Gulf airspace amid
heightened tensions between the U.S. and Iran affecting the region. But not all
countries' aviation agencies instructed their carriers to steer clear, and Iran
failed to ban civilian travel even as its military was on high
alert.
Countries often hesitate to shut down their airspace due to the
economic and political turbulence it can create, says Michael Bociurkiw, who was
an observer for Ukraine's investigation into the downing of a Malaysia Airlines
flight in 2014.
"Closing your airspace is quite extreme. It scares people
away. It scares away business investment, especially tourism," Bociurkiw
said.
"Sometimes these things can be politically sensitive and they draw
too much attention."
Other problems can result from leaving security
alerts in state hands. During unrest in eastern Ukraine in 2014, the country
raised its minimum safe altitude to 32,000 feet as a precautionary measure.
Three days later, a missile shot down Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, killing all
298 people on board.
States' civil aviation bodies are responsible for
shutting down their airspace and instructing domestic airlines to avoid foreign
skies in the event of danger, such as military conflict or natural
disasters.
However, the passenger planes that took off from Tehran's
airport shortly after an Iranian missile strike against two military bases in
Iraq where U.S. forces are stationed had received no security warnings from
Iran.
Aerospace consultant Ross Aimer is calling for a more active role
by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a Montreal-based United
Nations agency, which he deems "slow to respond" and lacking in
teeth.
"We're doing a terrible job of protecting our passengers and crews
worldwide," Aimer said.
ICAO says it issues advisories only in disputes
over airspace control or military conflicts where "the command-and-control
structure has been impaired" and the state is unable to send one
out.
"ICAO, which just about every country and airline is a signatory to,
should take over and do a better job of warning people any time there's
hostilities," Aimer said.
"When there's hostilities, immediately close
the airspace to everybody."
The agency rejected the idea that UN member
states would support stricter rules or an encroachment on their sovereignty,
citing protocols in its founding document.
"It's the sovereign
nation-states...who are very realistically and logically, I think, expected to
monitor and assess and publish any risks that they're aware of that may be
occurring in their territories relevant to civil aviation operations," ICAO
chief spokesman Anthony Philbin said.
States are ultimately responsible
for notifying other countries and airlines about conflict zones and other flight
hazards, with no heads-up to ICAO required, he said.
Elaine Parker,
vice-president of the Canadian Society of Air Safety Investigators, sympathizes
with state reluctance to wall off airspace.
"You're shutting down blood
flow, basically, into your country," she said.
Parker supports the hard
limits on ICAO's authority, saying that "it can't be ... an enforcement agency"
but acknowledging there may be room for a broader mandate.
"They do have
that capability of basically issuing some kind of warning. They normally don't
do that," she added, "but there's nothing wrong with ICAO issuing some sort of
an advisory that is worldwide."
Canadian air-crash investigators are
being given access to the wreckage of Ukrainian International Airlines Flight
752 and have been tapped to help unlock the contents of the data recorders from
the plane.
The Canadian Press has independently confirmed at least 86
victims with ties to Canada, many of them students and professors returning
after spending the December break visiting relatives in Iran.
Iran
announced several arrests in the in the wake of the fatal crash.
At least
four large passenger jets have been shot down over the past 32 years, resulting
the deaths of more than 1,000 passengers and crew.
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