PARIS, Jan 11: The downing of an Azerbaijan Airlines airplane shows that flying over Russia poses a "high risk" to civilian flights amid the war in Ukraine, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency said Friday.
The EASA said in a safety bulletin that the conflict "poses the risk of civil aircraft being unintentionally targeted in the airspace of the Russian Federation, due to possible civil-military coordination deficiencies, and the potential for misidentification".
The agency renewed its recommendation for airlines to avoid flying over western Russian airspace.
Russia called the recommendation "absurd".
"It is obvious that unfriendly states with the hands of the EASA (European Union Aviation Safety Agency) are trying to impose reputational and economic harm to Russia and its civil aviation," its aviation authority Rosaviatsia said.
Russia has banned EU airlines from flying over its airspace but those from China, Turkey, Gulf states and other countries are still authorised.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has said the Azerbaijan Airlines passenger jet, which crashed in Kazakhstan on December 25, killing 38 people, was shot at "from the ground" over the Russian city of Grozny where it had been due to land.
Russia has said its air defences were working at the time repelling Ukrainian drones, but has stopped short of saying it shot at the plane. —AFP