Flights suspended in Ukraine, southern Russia amid invasion
An aerial view shows corn stalks planted by Ukrainian farmers in the shape of the national coat of arms, trident, ahead of the country's 30th anniversary of independence, in a field near Boryspil International Airport outside Kyiv, Ukraine, July 22, 2021. (Reuters Photo)


Ukraine said on Thursday it has closed its airspace to civilian flights because of a "high risk" to safety, and Europe's aviation regulator also warned about the hazards of flying in bordering areas of Russia and Belarus because of military activities.

Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized a military operation in eastern Ukraine on Thursday in what appeared to be the start of a war in Europe.

Ukraine State Air Traffic Services Enterprise said on its website that the country's airspace was closed to civilian flights starting at 12:45 a.m. GMT on Thursday and that air traffic services had been suspended.

Following the decision, Turkish Airlines announced early Thursday that it has canceled all flights to Ukraine. The national flag carrier was operating flights to Kyiv, Kherson, Kharkiv, Lviv, Lviv, Mykolaiv, Odessa and Zaporizhzhia.

Turkey's low-cost carrier, Pegasus Airlines, also announced Thursday via a Twitter statement that it has canceled all flights to Ukraine after the country’s air space was closed.

"Due to the closure of the Ukrainian airspace, our flights to Ukraine, dating 24.02.2022 have been cancelled," the statement read.

The airport in Belarus' capital Minsk has cancelled all flights to the south.

"Today, flights from the National Airport to Istanbul, Tel Aviv and Sochi have been cancelled," it said in a statement.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) said airspace in Russia and Belarus within 100 nautical miles (185 kilometers) of their borders with Ukraine could also pose safety risks to airlines.

"In particular, there is a risk of both intentional targeting and misidentification of civil aircraft," the agency said in a conflict zone bulletin.

"The presence and possible use of a wide range of ground and airborne warfare systems pose a high risk for civil flights operating at all altitudes and flight levels."

Russia has also suspended domestic flights to and from a number of airports near its border with Ukraine until the early hours of March 2, its federal aviation agency Rosaviatsiya said in a statement on Thursday.

Flights at airports in the cities of Rostov-on-Don, Krasnodar, Anapa, Gelendzhik, Belgorod, Voronezh and Stavropol, among others, are temporarily suspended, the agency said.

The aviation industry has taken heightened notice of the risks the conflicts pose to civil aviation since Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down over eastern Ukraine in 2014.

EASA said Russia's Defense Ministry had sent an urgent message to Ukraine warning of high risk to flight safety due to the use of weapons and military equipment from 12:45 a.m. GMT on Thursday and asked Ukraine's air traffic control to stop flights.

Flight tracking websites showed early morning traffic skirting the whole country in crowded corridors to the north and west.

An El Al flight from Tel Aviv to Toronto made a sudden U-turn out of Ukraine's airspace around the time the airspace was closed, according to flight tracking website FlightRadar24.

A LOT Polish Airlines flight from Warsaw to Kyiv also turned back to Warsaw around the same time.

Hours before then, Safe Airspace, which was set up to provide safety and conflict zone information after the downing of MH17, said it had increased its risk level over all of Ukraine to "do not fly."

It also warned of the potential for a cyberattack on Ukraine's air traffic control.

Russia has also closed some airspace in the Rostov sector to the east of its border with Ukraine "in order to provide safety" for civil aviation flights, according to a notice to airmen.

Before Ukraine advised of the airspace restrictions, the United States, Italy, Canada, France and Britain had told their airlines to avoid certain airspace above eastern Ukraine and Crimea but stopped short of a total ban.

Germany's Lufthansa halted flights to Ukraine from Monday, joining KLM which already suspended flights.

Two Ukrainian airlines last week disclosed problems in securing insurance for some of their flights while foreign carriers began avoiding the country's airspace as Russia massed a huge military force on its border.