Belgrade: An Iran Air Airbus A320 passenger aircraft is being greeted with a water cannon salute upon arrival at Nikola Tesla airport on Tuesday.—Reuters
Belgrade: An Iran Air Airbus A320 passenger aircraft is being greeted with a water cannon salute upon arrival at Nikola Tesla airport on Tuesday.—Reuters

BELGRADE: Water cannons sprayed an Iran Air Airbus 320 in welcome on its arrival in Belgrade on Tuesday, marking the first flight from Tehran in 27 years in a sign of improved ties between Iran and Serbia.

The two countries had close ties until the early 1990s when former Yugoslavia, of which Serbia was a part, collapsed in a bloody war. Serbia backed its ethnic kin in Bosnia against Muslim Bosniaks and fought a counter-insurgency war in its own southern province of Kosovo against mainly Muslim Albanians.

Now, as Belgrade seeks to boost tourism and improve growth, it is reaching out to non-European markets to attract visitors from countries such as Iran, which Belgrade also sees as a target for agricultural exports, and Turkey.

Serbia introduced a visa free travel regime with Iran last August, after which the number of migrants from Iran rose from 120 in August to 480 in February, according to figures provided by Serbia’s Commissariat for Refugees.

Aid workers cautioned that flights from Tehran could be used by a large number of migrants seeking to leave Iran and move to Western Europe.

“Of course all positive things carry out their own risks,” Serbia’s minister for trade, tourism and telecommunication, Rasim Ljajic, told reporters. “Iranians used Belgrade as a transit (point) for their journey to the European Union.” He said the two countries had agreed to step up measures to prevent illegal migration.

“On the Iranian side, control at the plane boarding will be increased,” Ljajic said. “We also agreed to establish a joint committee in order to be able to resolve problems more swiftly.” Latif Shahi Methadi, an Iranian, took advantage of the visa free regime and arrived in Belgrade six months ago on a flight from Istanbul. He is now accommodated in a refugee camp in southern Serbia.

Published in Dawn, March 14th, 2018

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