Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Spearheading Effort To Better Protect Airborne Passenger Flights

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Mar, 2020 08:13 PM

    WASHINGTON - Canada is spearheading what Transport Minister Marc Garneau hopes will become an international effort to protect civilian airliners around the world from being shot down over conflict zones.

     

    In a speech today in Washington, Garneau is introducing what he's calling the Strategy for Safer Skies — a Canadian-led multilateral effort to ensure passenger aircraft are better able to avoid dangerous airspace.

     

    Canada has been seized with the issue ever since the downing of a Ukraine International Airlines flight in early January in the skies over Tehran, killing all 176 people aboard — 55 of them Canadian.

     

    Garneau is also pointing to a similar tragedy in 2014 over Ukraine as further evidence that something needs to be done.

     

    He says the goal is to establish co-ordination and information-sharing efforts between like-minded countries to improve risk assessments, guidance for avoiding dangerous airspace and airline protocols and practices.

     

    The hope is to establish a system that, with the help of the Montreal-based International Civil Aviation Organization, might eventually be adopted by countries around the world, particularly in areas where conflicts are more common.

     

    "Each state's airspace is sovereign; that is not in dispute. But in order to prevent another tragedy, we need to deal with inconsistencies, and in order to deal with inconsistencies in how the rules are implemented, we need a new approach," Garneau said in a prepared version of his speech.

     

    "To protect our citizens who travel throughout the interconnected global aviation network, we need to take action now."

     

    Garneau says the initiative already has the support of the United States, where the Federal Aviation Administration operates an existing "Notice to Airmen" system designed to keep U.S. pilots and carriers apprised of potential dangers.

     

    In an interview, Garneau said in the wake of the Jan. 8 tragedy in Iran, Canada has already issued two notices of its own for airlines to avoid Libyan and Syrian airspace.

     

    "We're already beginning to put into practice some of the things we think will be part of the Safer Skies strategy."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    First Nation Approves Vast Housing Development On Vancouver Reserve Lands

    First Nation Approves Vast Housing Development On Vancouver Reserve Lands
    VANCOUVER - One of the largest Indigenous-led housing developments in Canada is a step closer to rising in the heart of Vancouver after members of a First Nation voted in favour of the proposal.    

    First Nation Approves Vast Housing Development On Vancouver Reserve Lands

    Bail Decision On Monday For Montreal Blogger Who Touted Polytechnique Gunman

    Bail Decision On Monday For Montreal Blogger Who Touted Polytechnique Gunman
    MONTREAL - A decision on whether to grant bail to a Montreal blogger alleged to have glorified the gunman behind Montreal's 1989 Ecole polytechnique killings is expected Monday.    

    Bail Decision On Monday For Montreal Blogger Who Touted Polytechnique Gunman

    Alberta's High Court Won't Change Life Sentence Of Man Who Killed Seniors

    Alberta's High Court Won't Change Life Sentence Of Man Who Killed Seniors
    EDMONTON - The Alberta Court of Appeal has dismissed a sentence appeal of a man convicted of killing two Edmonton-area seniors.    

    Alberta's High Court Won't Change Life Sentence Of Man Who Killed Seniors

    Legault Defends Telling California Governor All French-Canadians Are Catholic

    SACRAMENTO, United States - Quebec Premier Francois Legault is defending comments made Wednesday to the governor of California in which he declared all French-Canadians are Catholic.    

    Legault Defends Telling California Governor All French-Canadians Are Catholic

    Ontario Passes Bill To Join Opioid Class-Action Lawsuit Launched By BC

    Ontario Passes Bill To Join Opioid Class-Action Lawsuit Launched By BC
    TORONTO - Ontario is joining five other provinces in a class-action lawsuit against dozens of opioid manufacturers.    

    Ontario Passes Bill To Join Opioid Class-Action Lawsuit Launched By BC

    Almost 14,000 Canadians Killed By Opioids Since 2016: New National Study

     New numbers released Wednesday show close to 14,000 Canadians have been killed by opioids over the last four years and more than 17,000 people have been hospitalized for opioid-related poisoning.

    Almost 14,000 Canadians Killed By Opioids Since 2016: New National Study