Georgian flight heading to Moscow in first air service since 2008 war
By APFriday, January 8, 2010
Georgian flight to Russia first since 2008 war
MOSCOW — A Georgian passenger plane landed in Russia on Friday in the first direct air service between the two countries since their war in 2008.
Moscow’s decision to allow the flight appeared to indicate that tensions between Georgia and Russia may be easing.
The chartered Georgia Airways Boeing 737 carrying 85 passengers took off from Tbilisi, Georgia, and touched down at Moscow’s snowy Domodedovo Airport two hours later.
Airline spokeswoman Nino Giorgobiani said the Russian Transport Ministry has granted permission for three charter flights to Moscow over the next few days. But the airline has not received a response to a request to resume regular air service.
Traveler Nata Samadalashvili said she looked forward to seeing relatives in Moscow.
“We are so happy to fly straight to Moscow and not via Yerevan or Kiev,” she said, referring to the capitals of Armenia and Ukraine that have served as stops on the Tbilisi-Moscow route.
Despite the resumption in air travel, it is likely to be years before normal relations resume.
The Kremlin has ruled out any contact with Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili — whom it accuses of war crimes and whose second term ends in 2013.
Russia curtailed flights in August 2008 soon after its tanks crossed into Georgia’s rebel-held South Ossetia region, ostensibly to defend the Moscow-friendly separatists from Georgia’s attempts to retake the region by force.
Most of the fighting in the war was concentrated on South Ossetia and another breakaway province, Abkhazia. Russia has since recognized both regions as independent states, but only Venezuela, Nicaragua and the South Pacific island nation of Nauru have followed its example. Georgia has fiercely protested, claiming that Russia is trying to annex the regions.
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Associated Press writer Misha Dzhindzhikhashvili contributed from Tbilisi, Georgia.