Finnish authorities to exercise special caution on Southwind Airlines, says boss of Traficom
Authorities in Finland will exercise special caution if an aircraft of Southwind Airlines requests permission to enter Finland, Jarkko Saarimäki, the director general of the Finnish Transport and Communications Agency (Traficom), stated to YLE on Sunday. Questions about the backgrounds of the purportedly Turkish charter airline were raised recently in an investigative report by Bild, one of the leading tabloid newspapers in Germany. Bild on Friday reported that the airline was established by Russian nationals and has leased most of its staff and fleet from Nordwind Airlines, a Russian airline that is prohibited from entering the airspace of the EU. The newspaper also wrote that the airline was set up to carry migrants to the external borders of the 27-country bloc via Minsk, the capital of Belarus. Safa Oruç, the director of aviation safety at Southwind Airlines, on Monday stated to YLE in an e-mail that the airline is not involved in any criminal activity, that the airline and its aircraft are registered in Turkey and that the airline is owned by a Turkish national. “Not a single member of Southwind’s management is Russian,” added Oruç. Oruç told YLE that Southwind Airlines has leased its aircraft from Japan, Turkey and the US. Three of its 12 aircraft have previously operated in Russia. Saarimäki from Traficom stated to the public broadcasting company a day earlier that the airline has enquired about the possibility to use Helsinki Airport as a diversion airport for flights to St. Petersburg.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2023-12-27/unaligned/finnish-authorities-to-exercise-special-caution-on-southwind-airlines-says-boss-of-traficom
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Finnish authorities to exercise special caution on Southwind Airlines, says boss of Traficom
Authorities in Finland will exercise special caution if an aircraft of Southwind Airlines requests permission to enter Finland, Jarkko Saarimäki, the director general of the Finnish Transport and Communications Agency (Traficom), stated to YLE on Sunday. Questions about the backgrounds of the purportedly Turkish charter airline were raised recently in an investigative report by Bild, one of the leading tabloid newspapers in Germany. Bild on Friday reported that the airline was established by Russian nationals and has leased most of its staff and fleet from Nordwind Airlines, a Russian airline that is prohibited from entering the airspace of the EU. The newspaper also wrote that the airline was set up to carry migrants to the external borders of the 27-country bloc via Minsk, the capital of Belarus. Safa Oruç, the director of aviation safety at Southwind Airlines, on Monday stated to YLE in an e-mail that the airline is not involved in any criminal activity, that the airline and its aircraft are registered in Turkey and that the airline is owned by a Turkish national. “Not a single member of Southwind’s management is Russian,” added Oruç. Oruç told YLE that Southwind Airlines has leased its aircraft from Japan, Turkey and the US. Three of its 12 aircraft have previously operated in Russia. Saarimäki from Traficom stated to the public broadcasting company a day earlier that the airline has enquired about the possibility to use Helsinki Airport as a diversion airport for flights to St. Petersburg.<br/>