April 17, 2008 at 11:23 pm
greek authorities have denied MAT Macedonian airlines the right to fly over its territory unless the airline changes its name (due to greek issues with the name)
Has this situation happened before and what right do the greeks have to do this
By: mike currill - 25th April 2008 at 17:13
That’s a straight forward enough answer for me. Far better explained than I could have done it.
By: Grey Area - 21st April 2008 at 07:16
A country’s airspace is an integral part of it’s sovereign territory.
Sovereign nations have always had the right to refuse, or to grant, admission to their territory as they see fit. That’s why there are things like passports and visas.
Clear enough? 🙂
By: chornedsnorkack - 21st April 2008 at 07:03
The same right as many states have to refuse overflight to Israeli and South African planes.
By: V o l k - 20th April 2008 at 23:38
Probably a little matter of the fact that the Real Macedonia is a district of Greece.
and you are an expert on “the real macedonia” how?
the question simply asks how is this legal
By: mike currill - 19th April 2008 at 17:47
Probably a little matter of the fact that the Real Macedonia is a district of Greece.