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First European flight in 20 years lands in Baghdad

New airline to launch direct London-Baghdad flights
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 31, 2010 - The first direct flights between London and Baghdad by a private Iraqi firm will begin next week, a civil aviation official said on Sunday. The Al-Nasr company of Iraqi businessman Hussein al-Khawam "will fly its first Baghdad-London flight on November 3, but that date is not finalised," said Nasser Hussein Badr, civil aviation director at the transport ministry. A Boeing 737 leased from a European firm would initially fly the route, he said, without specifying what name the airline would bear. Flagship carrier Iraqi Airways said in May that the state-owned company would be dissolved after one of its planes was impounded at London's Gatwick Airport in relation to a financial row with Kuwait.

Al-Nasr's announcement came on the same day a plane operated by France's Aigle Azur landed at Baghdad International Airport, becoming the first flight by a European carrier to arrive in the city since a 1990 international embargo on Iraq. Aigle Azur's twice-weekly Paris-Baghdad flights would begin in mid-January, the airline said. That flight, and the announcement of the route to London, come at a time when foreign companies are demonstrating a growing desire to grab a share in oil-rich Iraq's post-war reconstruction, following the 2003 US-led invasion. More than 300 foreign firms are taking part in a 10-day international exhibition that opens in Baghdad on Monday, featuring companies from every sector other than defence. The interest in aviation and business also indicate the improving security situation in Iraq, where bombs, killings and kidnappings remain routine, but significantly less than a peak in 2006 and 2007.

An Iraqi Airways flight to London in May ended in legal nightmare for the carrier, after Kuwait took court action to reclaim more than 1.0 billion dollars it says it is owed. Kuwait Airways alleged in court that Iraqi Airways owes it 1.2 billion dollars (900 million euros). The dispute dates back to executed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait in 1990, when the airline says 10 of its planes and aircraft parts were plundered after its airport was seized. A British judge ordered that the Iraqi Airways plane be impounded and the passport of the carrier's chief executive, Kifah Hassan Jabbar, be seized. Both the plane and the official later returned to Iraq, but the carrier decided to suspend flights to Europe. Despite that decision, the airline continues to fly routes in the Middle East, Badr said. The United Nations slapped an embargo on Iraq following as punishment for the Kuwait invasion.
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 31, 2010
The first flight by a European carrier in 20 years landed in Baghdad on Sunday, marking an important step for a country looking to post-war reconstruction following the ravages of the 2003 US-led invasion.

The Airbus A319 operated by France's Aigle Azur airline from Paris-Charles de Gaulle airport touched down at 6:00 am (0300 GMT), carrying on board France's Trade Minister Anne-Marie Idrac and 111 passengers, including 40 French businessmen, officials said.

Commercial flights between the two capitals, previously operated by national carrier Air France, were suspended after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 that led to an embargo.

"This is an historic event because this is the first scheduled direct service by a European airline between a Western capital and Baghdad for 20 years," France's ambassador to Iraq, Boris Boillon, said before Sunday's flight.

The arrival comes amid hopes of a boost in historically close business links between France and Iraq.

Aigle Azur, owned by the Franco-Algerian Idjerouidene family, said it would begin twice weekly flights starting mid-January.

The airline is getting the jump on other European carriers considering the route, which is potentially lucrative thanks to a growing desire among Western businesses to grab a share in oil-rich Iraq's post-war reconstruction.

Also on Sunday, an Iraqi civil aviation official announced the first direct flights between London and Baghdad by a private firm.

The Al-Nasr company of Iraqi businessman Hussein al-Khawam "will fly its first Baghdad-London flight on November 3, but that date is not finalised," said Nasser Hussein Badr, civil aviation director at the transport ministry.

A Boeing 737 leased from a European firm would initially fly the route, he said, without specifying what name the airline would bear.

"For us, Iraq is one of the countries with the greatest potential, behind China and India," said Gilles Viry, an executive with French construction giant Fayat, who was on the inaugural Aigle Azur flight.

The French trade minister was due to to sign trade agreements notably on agriculture and investment protection during her visit to Iraq.

"It's unthinkable for French businesses not to take part in the reconstruction of Iraq," Idrac said before leaving for Baghdad.

The interest in aviation and business also indicate the improving security situation in Iraq, where bombs, killings and kidnappings remain routine, but significantly less than a peak in 2006 and 2007.

More than 300 international firms are taking part in a 10-day international exhibition that opens in Baghdad on Monday, featuring companies from every sector other than defence.

Aigle Azur Vice President Meziane Idjerouidene, who also was on board the flight, said the new route would probably start by losing money but pick up in the medium term.

"I am very touched by the fact that our company will be contributing to the rebuilding of Iraq," said an emotional Idjerouidene.

Aigle Azur is negotiating a code-sharing deal that would allow Air France-KLM also to offer flights to the Iraqi capital.

Germany's Lufthansa, which flies to the city of Arbil in Iraqi Kurdistan, also had hoped to launch a direct flight to Baghdad, but said it had deferred due to insufficient demand.

France had close trade links with the regime of Iraq's executed leader Saddam Hussein and was vehemently opposed to the March 2003 US-led invasion.

Today French business accounts for only one percent of foreign investment in Iraq.

France doubled its exports to Iraq in 2009 to 413 million euros (571 million dollars) but the figure is low given the estimated 600-billion-dollar cost of the country's reconstruction.



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