I propose to take Questions Nos. 147 to 151, inclusive, and 157 together.
The Air Navigation (Foreign Military Aircraft) Order 1952 gives the Minister for Foreign Affairs primary responsibility for the regulation of activity by foreign military aircraft in Ireland. In exercising this responsibility, successive Ministers have stipulated that permission for the landing of foreign military aircraft at Shannon airport may be granted subject to the conditions that apply to all overflights and landings by foreign military aircraft; namely that the aircraft are unarmed, carry no arms, ammunition or explosives, do not engage in intelligence gathering, and that the flights in question do not form any part of military exercises or operations. These conditions are strictly applied.
Countries are asked to submit their requests two days in advance of the entry of aircraft into Irish airspace. It is not the practice to divulge information relation to the specific purposes of individual landings. However, in the vast majority of cases, military aircraft use the landing facilities at Shannon airport for the purposes of refuelling and to allow for crew and passenger rest. In a small number of cases, aircraft land in Shannon airport to allow for the transport of dignitaries or other persons participating in visits to Ireland, as a result of medical emergencies on board, for flight crew training, and for aircraft maintenance purposes.
The list of countries provided in reply to Question No. 99 of 1 July referred to aircraft which had landed at Shannon as well as overflights in Irish airspace. The list of countries provided in reply to Question No. 152 of 8 July refers only to landings at Shannon airport.Permission for a landing by a military aircraft at Shannon airport was refused on one occasion in the past 12 months and on the basis that the request did not meet with the normal conditions that apply to landings at Irish airports by foreign military aircraft.
Details of the overflights in Irish airspace during the past 12 months are set out in the following table.
COUNTRY
|
TOTAL
|
AUSTRALIA
|
1
|
BELGIUM
|
36
|
CANADA
|
20
|
COLOMBIA
|
1
|
COTE D'IVORE
|
1
|
CZECH REPUBLIC
|
7
|
DENMARK
|
3
|
DJIBOUTI
|
1
|
EGYPT
|
19
|
FRANCE
|
55
|
GABON
|
2
|
GERMANY
|
29
|
GREECE
|
4
|
INDIA
|
3
|
ISRAEL
|
1
|
ITALY
|
21
|
JAPAN
|
1
|
JORDAN
|
20
|
LEBANON
|
2
|
LIBYA
|
1
|
MALAYSIA
|
2
|
MEXICO
|
5
|
MOROCCO
|
2
|
NETHERLANDS
|
74
|
NEW ZEALAND
|
1
|
OMAN
|
4
|
PAKISTAN
|
4
|
PANAMA
|
2
|
QATAR
|
4
|
ROMANIA
|
1
|
SWEDEN
|
8
|
SWITZERLAND
|
4
|
UAE
|
1
|
UK
|
8
|
USA
|
1194
|
VIETNAM
|
3
|
YEMEN
|
1
|
Total
|
1546
|