Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Sanctions-hit Belarus looks to Gambia to boost its depleted air fleet

In This Article:

LONDON (Reuters) - Sanctions-hit Belarusian flag carrier Belavia is on the cusp of adding three Airbus planes to its depleted fleet after repurposing aircraft that had previously belonged to Gambian airline Magic Air , three people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Western sanctions imposed on Belarus and its larger neighbour Russia after Minsk forced a Ryanair plane to land in the Belarusian capital and following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine mean the two staunch allies face a shortage of planes, particularly large passenger aircraft. Belarus and Russia share a borderless union state.

The three wide-body Airbus A330 aircraft, which can typically carry around 250 passengers each, were all registered to Magic Air when they landed in Minsk on August 17, 2024, records by Flightradar24 and two other flight tracking services providers reviewed by Reuters show.

State-owned Belavia is in the process of signing a contract to buy the planes, which arrived in very poor technical conditions, and plans to start flying them this spring-summer season, one of the sources said.

Should Belavia succeed, it could give Russia a blueprint for circumventing sanctions through the use of non-Western nations' planes, according to industry experts.

The United States reached separate deals on Tuesday with Ukraine and Russia to pause their attacks at sea and against energy targets, with Washington agreeing to push to lift some sanctions against Moscow.

While Western sanctions on Belarus and Russia have sought to cut access to aircraft parts, many countries, including Gambia, have not signed up to those restrictions and have no obligation to enforce them.

Magic Air, which has no online presence, is a little-known private company that operates in aircraft leasing and airline services, according to a Reuters review of the Gambian justice ministry's companies registry.

The tiny African state is not subject to aviation sanctions, but some Gambia-registered vessels have been targeted by U.S., UK and European Union sanctions for helping Russia evade restrictions on its oil exports through a network of tankers known as the shadow fleet.

Industry publication Aviation Week reported in August 2024 that Magic Air sent three Airbus planes to Belarus from Cairo, Istanbul and Muscat.

Details of Belavia's plans to take over and operate the planes, which Reuters established through speaking to the three sources, have not been previously reported.

The sources asked not to be identified as they are not authorised to speak to the media.

Belavia and the governments of Russia and Belarus did not respond to requests for comment. Calls to a Gambian phone number for Magic Air provided by the justice ministry did not go through.