Kazakhstan boosts compliance with global aviation standards
18.05.2016
By Tatyana Kuzmina
A Significant Safety Concern (SSC) in Kazakhstan has been finally resolved through joint efforts in early May, Tengrinews reports citing the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). This leaves no crucial concerns indicated by ICAO for Kazakhstan unresolved,
The now-planished aircraft operations SSC was originally identified during a 2009 ICAO audit of Kazakhstan’s aviation safety oversight capacities, conducted under the ICAO Universal Safety Oversight Audit Programme (USOAP).
The other critical concern indentified by the audit was an aircraft airworthiness SSC, which a subsequent USOAP Coordinated Validation Mission (ICVM) in 2014 identified as being satisfactorily resolved.
“Kazakhstan has resolved all the crucial concerns indicated by ICAO,” confirmed Kazakhstan’s Civil Aviation Committee in its statement.
“By resolving this matter through coordinated capacity-building, and with support from donor States and International Organizations, ICAO and Kazakhstan have helped to further improve the safety of operations in its territory without any negative impacts on the capacity and efficiency of local air services,” remarked ICAO Council President Dr. Olumuyiwa Benard Aliu.
The joint was jointly led by ICAO European and North Atlantic (EURNAT) Regional Office and the ICAO Technical Cooperation Bureau under the ‘No Country Left Behind’ initiative. It was implemented through a pre-agreed plan developed in conjunction with the Kazakh government and supplemented by training through experts contributed by Portugal, Turkey, Singapore, Ukraine and the ICAO Air Navigation Bureau. Funding for the assistance programme was also collaborative, with contributions coming from Kazakhstan, the ICAO EURNAT Office and the ICAO SAFE Fund.
According to First Vice Minister for Innovations and Development of Kazakhstan Zhenis Kassymbek the July 2009 ICAO audit originally identified “82 concerns, including 2 critical ones".
The audit contained so much criticism that EU aviation authorities put 59 Kazakh airlines, all the county’s airlines except Air Astana, onto the EU “black list” banning their aircraft from making flights to Europe. Most of the airlines are still on the list. But with the progress in Kazakhstan’s compliance with the global aviation safety rules, EU authorities may soon reconsider their ban.
"We are expecting ICAO’s validation of our successful resolution of the concerns to influence the decision of the European Commission’s decision to remove Kazakh airlines from the EU Air Safety List,” the Kazakh Committee said.
“The main concern was that the structure and staff of the Civil Aviation Committee did not meet the safety requirements: the aviation authority employed too few men and could not execute proper control. The level of its experts was insufficiently high either,” he said, Tengrinews reports.