The Russian Ministry of Transport threatens to take inductive measures against Tajikistan over a ban on Yamal Airlines flights to Dushanbe from Zhukovsky Airport.
The Ministry of Transport of Russian will take all necessary measures to make the Tajik authorities coordinate flights to Dushanbe from Zhukovsky Airport, Russian Minister of Transport Maxim Sokolov told Russian media on the sidelines of the International Arctic Forum in Arkhangelsk.
He noted that the sides could conduct additional negotiations over flights from Zhukovsky Airport.
“Either negotiations or appropriate inductive measures,” the Russian minister said.
Recall, Tajik civil aviation authorities propose Russia’s Yamal Airlines to operate flights out of Zhukovsky Airport to the Tajik southern city of Kulob instead of Dushanbe but Yamal Airlines has rejected the proposal serve Kulob.
Dushanbe in December banned Yamal Airlines flights to Tajikistan out of Zhukovsky Airport and Moscow suspended flights of Tajik private air carrier, Somon Air, to the Russian regions. The ban included flights of the airline to all Russian cities, except Moscow and St. Petersburg.
Tajik and Russian authorities reached an agreement aimed at resolving a dispute that has prevented some civilian flights between their countries at a meeting of the Tajik-Russian commission for economic cooperation that too place in Dushanbe on January 27, 2017. Somon Air was allowed to resume its flights to four Russian cities — Krasnoyarsk, Krasnodar, Ufa, and Orenburg — beginning on February 3.
Meanwhile, Russia's Yamal Airlines will resume its flights to Tajikistan during the summer from Zhukovsky International Airport in the Moscow region.
The history of this dispute dates back to early November. The two countries faced the threat of suspension of flights in early November because of a dispute between Moscow and Dushanbe over the status of Russia’s Zhukovsky International Airport, which was officially opened in May 2016.
Dushanbe called for a revision of existing bilateral agreements on mutual air flights, saying that Zhukovsky is Moscow’s fourth international airport and that it has increased the number of flights from Moscow to Tajikistan.
The Russian civil aviation authorities insisted that Zhukovsky International Airport is not under Moscow’s authority but of the town of Ramenskoye.
Tajikistan that time agreed only to flights for Ural Airlines and Tajik Air from Zhukovsky Airport.




