Travel | Russia Russia Now World's Most Dangerous Nation to Fly Series of deadly crashes blamed on lax regulation By Rob Quinn Posted Dec 7, 2011 4:28 AM CST Copied Forensic experts examine a body near a wreckage of a Tu-134 plane that crashed near Petrozavodsk, Russia, in June, killing 47 people. (AP Photo/Timur Khanov, Komsomolskaya Pravda) Russia is now, mile for mile, the deadliest place in the world to fly, the Wall Street Journal finds. Nine fatal crashes—including one that killed an entire professional hockey team—have claimed a total of 140 lives. While eight of the crashes involved old Soviet-era aircraft, experts say the real problem in the former aerospace superpower is the sloppiness, risk-taking, and ineffective regulation more commonly associated with aviation basket cases like the Congo. Crash investigators have found large numbers of safety violations, including drunk flight crews and forged documents. Safety officials—who blame the surge in crashes on government efforts to boost business by reducing inspections—plan to turn things around by stepping up regulation, raising standards, and closing many smaller airlines. Similar steps made Chinese skies some of the world's safest after a series of deadly crashes a decade ago. "We're taking an absolutely principled approach to ensuring safety now," the Russian Aviation Agency's safety chief insists. "We're not allowing anything by." Read These Next Kristi Noem won't like this Wall Street Journal exposé. Au pair struck a deal to walk free in murder case. She got 10 years. Jimmy Fallon's pasta sauces are now kaput thanks to Epstein files. Jeanine Pirro is suing her own hometown after she fell in the street. Report an error