Flights between Russia and Ukraine halted

KIEV, Ukraine and MOSCOW, Russia – Direct flights between Ukraine and Russia were grounded on Sunday, as mistrust between the two countries boiled over into a new trade war that could affect hundreds

KIEV, Ukraine and MOSCOW, Russia – Direct flights between Ukraine and Russia were grounded on Sunday, as mistrust between the two countries boiled over into a new trade war that could affect hundreds of thousands of people.

Russia and Ukraine share both a long history and a fierce animosity, rekindled by months of winter 2013-14 protests that brought Petro Poroshenko, a strongly pro-western leader, to power.

Ukraine’s decision to escape Moscow’s orbit set off a bloody chain of events that included Russia’s March 2014 occupation and annexation of Crimea and the 18-month eastern separatist conflict that has killed at least 8,000 people.

The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, denies choreographing the eastern revolt in reprisal for the change of heart in Ukraine, which Moscow had originally seen as part of a new geopolitical bloc to rival the European Union and eventually NATO.

But Kiev and its western allies refuse to believe him because Putin had also at first denied suggestions that Russian forces had been dispatched to take over Crimea. He later admitted on Russian state television that the entire operation had been planned well in advance.

The Kremlin leader’s hostile approach to his western neighbor and expansionist dreams launched a global trade war that saw Russia ban the import of most western food. Brussels and Washington’s own sanctions included freezing the foreign assets of close Putin allies and partial bans on investments in Russia’s vital energy industry.

The flight spat started with Poroshenko’s announcement on 16 September that Russian airlines would soon be barred from landing in – but not flying over – Ukraine because of Moscow’s refusal to hand back Crimea. Russia denounced the decision as “madness” before responding with similar measures this month.

A desperate round of negotiations between the two sides in Brussels on Friday ended without any immediate solution in sight. Russian authorities estimate that some 800,000 people flew between the two countries in the first eight months of the year.

Travelers must now look into other less convenient, more expensive options including slow overnight train rides and flights via other countries on relatively good terms with both sides.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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