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Yasser Arafat International Airport (Arabic: مطار ياسر عرفات الدولي Maṭār Yāsir 'Arafāt ad-Dawli) (IATA: GZA, ICAO: LVGZ), formerly Gaza International Airport and Dahaniya International Airport, is located in the Gaza Strip, in Rafah close to the Egyptian border. It is owned, and was operated, by the Palestinian Authority, and served as the home airport for Palestinian Airlines. The airport was able to handle 700,000 passengers per year and operated 24 hours and 364 days a year (closed on Yom Kippur). The airport opened in 1998, but it closed in 2001 after being severely damaged by Israeli military forces.
[edit] HistoryThe airport was built with funding from Japan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Spain, and Germany and designed by Moroccan architects (modeled after Casablanca airport) and engineers funded by Morocco's King Hassan II. The total cost was $86 million. After a year of construction, it opened on 24 November 1998; attendees at the opening ceremony included Yasser Arafat and US President Bill Clinton. At the time, the opening of the airport was described as evidence of progress toward Palestinian statehood.[1] The airport was twinned with Mohammed V International Airport, in Casablanca, Morocco. The radar station and control tower were destroyed by Israel Defense Forces aircraft in 2001 after the start of the al-Aqsa Intifada, and bulldozers cut the runway apart in January 2002.[2][3] Israel's attack on the airport was motivated by Israeli concerns that they could not control what the Palestinian Authority transported in or out of the Gaza Strip, such as weapons, and to end the Arafat government's support of terrorism.[4] From 2001 to 2006, airport staff still manned the ticket counters and baggage areas,[3] although no aircraft flew into or out of the airport during that period. The closest airport in the area is El Arish International Airport in Egypt.[citation needed] [edit] RunwaysThe airport has one runway of 3080 m x 60 m, but it is no longer operational due to extensive damage to the north and middle sections of the runway. Some of the taxiways are damaged, but the apron did not sustain heavy damage. [edit] Buildings and TerminalThe total area of the airport is stated in local units as "2,350 dunams", or 235 hectares (2.35 km2).[5] The main terminal building is a two-story 4,000-square-metre (0.40 ha) Arab Islamic designed building which is decorated with Moroccan tile, features glass windows framed by arches, and has state-of-the-art equipment. A control tower faces the runway and apron.[citation needed] The airport was staffed by a total of 400 personnel.[citation needed] There were no ramps for passengers to disembark directly to the terminal. Stairs were brought out to the planes parked on the apron.[citation needed] Facilities within the terminal building included:[citation needed]
The airport included 19 other buildings:[citation needed]
[edit] Ground transportationThe airport was linked by buses and taxis to the rest of the Gaza Strip. [edit] AirlinesA list of airlines once operating at the airport: [edit] Air Traffic ControlAir Traffic Control at the airport was assumed[when?] by the Palestinian Civil Aviation Authority, but traffic to and from the airport was also under the jurisdiction of the Israel South Control.[clarification needed][citation needed] [edit] See also[edit] References
[edit] External links
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