Strange Magic Air flights raise doubts about the plane's whereabouts

Strange Magic Air flights raise doubts about the plane's whereabouts


An interesting development surrounding an obscure African airline called Magic Air is gaining international attention following the recent transfer of four Airbus aircraft to Minsk, Belarus. The aircraft include an A320 and three A330s, all previously associated with a Gambian airline that never actually began operations.

how flight lineThe movement of these planes raises suspicions that they may be on their way to Russia, a common scenario and in line with the methods Iran uses to evade Western sanctions.

Gambia-based Magic Air maintains a veil of mystery. Despite owning four of these aircraft, it has never flown a single flight, and its website, launched in August 2023, remains devoid of specific information, displaying only the cryptic message “coming soon.”


There are no details about the company's history, ownership, or future plans, raising doubts about its true intentions.

The four aircraft include a 19-year-old Airbus A320 (serial number 2600) and three A330-200s, each around 21 years old (serial numbers 491, 509 and 525). Interestingly, all of these A330s were previously operated by Lebanon’s Sky Aviation.

The A320, which also arrived in Minsk, has a similar history. It was initially used by Jetstar Airways in Australia in 2005, and from 2014 it became part of the Bangkok Airways fleet, being put into storage in 2020. Frequent changes of ownership between different companies, from HKAC to Avolon, and events leasing Frustrated, making the path of these aircraft even more cloudy.

Even more curiously, Magic Air never brought the planes to Banjul, the capital of Gambia. Instead, the planes remained parked at Istanbul Ataturk, Cairo, and Muscat airports. Yet last week, in a coordinated maneuver, all four planes left these locations and landed in Minsk within hours.

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The aircraft movements were reported by the Russian aviation channel Aviatorshina, with one A330, registered as C5-TAC, departing Cairo on August 16, followed by an A320, C5-TAA, which departed Istanbul on August 17. The transfers raise speculation that the bizarre strategy could be a way to acquire aircraft and circumvent international sanctions affecting Russian commercial aviation.

Given the current context, it is very likely that these aircraft will continue their journey to Russia, where direct aircraft deliveries to Russian airlines are prohibited due to the invasion of Ukraine.

This case echoes previous incidents, such as the case of a modified A320neo aircraft being directed to Russia via Muscat, highlighting the need to remain vigilant about tactics that can be used to circumvent international restrictions.

The situation seems like a modern-day spy plot, with every move of the aircraft built by Magic Air being the subject of intense speculation in the global aviation landscape.


By Andrea Hargraves

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