- published: 12 Mar 2011
- views: 15385
- author: QuatchiCanada
2:15
BBC Interview: Evidence That Algeria Is Helping Gaddafi (March, 2011)
This is an interview with a Libyan pilot who received some documents showing the Algerian ...
published: 12 Mar 2011
author: QuatchiCanada
BBC Interview: Evidence That Algeria Is Helping Gaddafi (March, 2011)
This is an interview with a Libyan pilot who received some documents showing the Algerian military is assisting the Gaddafi regime. Translation to English: Captain Nasr Ammar: "I thank the Arabic BBC channel.. In fact, I have in my possession some very important documents (link below shows the documents) that truly prove the culpability of Algeria, the Algerian government, the Algerian Airlines, and the Algerian Air Force. These documents, my honoured brother, have the registration numbers of many Algerian airplanes that start with the number 7T; in English the reference is "seven tango". The kind of aircrafts that I have documents on are of either three or four types of aircraft, or five to be truthful with you. In regard to the Algerian forces, it sent planes which were civilian planes used to transport soldiers, military equipment, ammunitions, and others. What I have in my position now are many documents, and I did not have enough time to go over it all..." BBC newsman interrupts: " Where did you obtain these documents?" Captain Nasr Ammar: " I got them from an air traffic controller by the name of Abdulallah Al-Turki who is now in Benghazi. He sent me these documents, and I spoke with him. He sent me these documents and I have been reviewing them as he sent them also to the Almanara channel (Almanara TV or Almanara.org) in Switzerland here... a Libyan channel, and they called upon me to clarify these documents. In front of me are some documents that show, as an ...
- published: 12 Mar 2011
- views: 15385
- author: QuatchiCanada
9:00
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (1of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese:...
published: 05 Oct 2008
author: gordonblade2008
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (1of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese: 北京首都國際機場; pinyin: Běijīng Shǒudū Guójì Jīchǎng) (IATA: PEK, ICAO: ZBAA) is the main international airport that serves the capital city of Beijing, People's Republic of China. The IATA Airport Code is PEK, reflecting Beijing's former Romanization Peking. The code BJS is also frequently used, reflecting the current pinyin spelling of Beijing and including all airports in the Beijing metropolitan area; currently, Beijing Capital (PEK) is the only civil aviation airport that falls under BJS. The airport is located 20 km to the northeast of Beijing city center. Although many consider it to lie in Shunyi District, it is, in fact, an exclave of Chaoyang District, Beijing. The airport is a primary hub of operations for Air China, which flies to around 120 destinations (excluding cargo). It is also a hub for Hainan Airlines and China Southern Airlines. The airport expansion is largely funded by a 500-million-euro (USD 625 million) loan from the European Investment Bank (EIB). The loan is the largest ever granted by the EIB in Asia; the agreement was signed during the eighth China-EU Summit held in September 2005.[citation needed] Beijing Capital is today the busiest airport in the People's Republic of China, having registered double-digit growth annually since the SARS crisis of 2003. In 2004, it became the busiest airport in Asia by aircraft movements, overtaking Tokyo ...
- published: 05 Oct 2008
- views: 190124
- author: gordonblade2008
6:25
HEATHROW: London HEATHROW AIRPORT, Various INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Views of UK Largest Airport
HEATHROW: London HEATHROW AIRPORT Various INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Views of UK Largest Airport ...
published: 02 Dec 2012
author: WestEndNews
HEATHROW: London HEATHROW AIRPORT, Various INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Views of UK Largest Airport
HEATHROW: London HEATHROW AIRPORT Various INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Views of UK Largest Airport London, UK 2012 1. Various interior views. 00:00 -- 03:51 2. Various exterior views, planes. 03:51 -- 06:24 London Heathrow Airport or Heathrow (IATA*: LHR, ICAO*: EGLL) is a major international airport serving London, England, United Kingdom. Located in the London Borough of Hillingdon, in West London, Heathrow is the busiest airport in the United Kingdom and the third busiest airport in the world (as of 2012) in terms of total passenger traffic, handling more international passengers than any other airport around the globe. It is also the busiest airport in the EU by passenger traffic and the third busiest in Europe given the number of traffic movements, with a figure surpassed only by Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport and Frankfurt Airport. Heathrow is London's main airport, having replaced RAF Northolt and the earlier and better-known Croydon Airport, and together with Gatwick, Southend, Stansted, Luton and London City, London is the busiest city airport system in the world by passenger traffic (with 133666888 passengers travelling through the six airports); and second only to New York City in terms of traffic movements. The airport sustains 76600 jobs directly and around 116000 indirectly in the immediate area, and this, together with the large number of global corporations with offices close to the airport, makes Heathrow a modern aerotropolis which contributes an estimated 2.7 ...
- published: 02 Dec 2012
- views: 184
- author: WestEndNews
9:02
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (2of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese:...
published: 05 Oct 2008
author: gordonblade2008
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (2of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese: 北京首都國際機場; pinyin: Běijīng Shǒudū Guójì Jīchǎng) (IATA: PEK, ICAO: ZBAA) is the main international airport that serves the capital city of Beijing, People's Republic of China. The IATA Airport Code is PEK, reflecting Beijing's former Romanization Peking. The code BJS is also frequently used, reflecting the current pinyin spelling of Beijing and including all airports in the Beijing metropolitan area; currently, Beijing Capital (PEK) is the only civil aviation airport that falls under BJS. The airport is located 20 km to the northeast of Beijing city center. Although many consider it to lie in Shunyi District, it is, in fact, an exclave of Chaoyang District, Beijing. The airport is a primary hub of operations for Air China, which flies to around 120 destinations (excluding cargo). It is also a hub for Hainan Airlines and China Southern Airlines. The airport expansion is largely funded by a 500-million-euro (USD 625 million) loan from the European Investment Bank (EIB). The loan is the largest ever granted by the EIB in Asia; the agreement was signed during the eighth China-EU Summit held in September 2005.[citation needed] Beijing Capital is today the busiest airport in the People's Republic of China, having registered double-digit growth annually since the SARS crisis of 2003. In 2004, it became the busiest airport in Asia by aircraft movements, overtaking Tokyo ...
- published: 05 Oct 2008
- views: 49278
- author: gordonblade2008
9:08
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (3 of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese:...
published: 05 Oct 2008
author: gordonblade2008
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (3 of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese: 北京首都國際機場; pinyin: Běijīng Shǒudū Guójì Jīchǎng) (IATA: PEK, ICAO: ZBAA) is the main international airport that serves the capital city of Beijing, People's Republic of China. The IATA Airport Code is PEK, reflecting Beijing's former Romanization Peking. The code BJS is also frequently used, reflecting the current pinyin spelling of Beijing and including all airports in the Beijing metropolitan area; currently, Beijing Capital (PEK) is the only civil aviation airport that falls under BJS. The airport is located 20 km to the northeast of Beijing city center. Although many consider it to lie in Shunyi District, it is, in fact, an exclave of Chaoyang District, Beijing. The airport is a primary hub of operations for Air China, which flies to around 120 destinations (excluding cargo). It is also a hub for Hainan Airlines and China Southern Airlines. The airport expansion is largely funded by a 500-million-euro (USD 625 million) loan from the European Investment Bank (EIB). The loan is the largest ever granted by the EIB in Asia; the agreement was signed during the eighth China-EU Summit held in September 2005.[citation needed] Beijing Capital is today the busiest airport in the People's Republic of China, having registered double-digit growth annually since the SARS crisis of 2003. In 2004, it became the busiest airport in Asia by aircraft movements, overtaking Tokyo ...
- published: 05 Oct 2008
- views: 37319
- author: gordonblade2008
9:04
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (4 of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese:...
published: 05 Oct 2008
author: gordonblade2008
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (4 of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese: 北京首都國際機場; pinyin: Běijīng Shǒudū Guójì Jīchǎng) (IATA: PEK, ICAO: ZBAA) is the main international airport that serves the capital city of Beijing, People's Republic of China. The IATA Airport Code is PEK, reflecting Beijing's former Romanization Peking. The code BJS is also frequently used, reflecting the current pinyin spelling of Beijing and including all airports in the Beijing metropolitan area; currently, Beijing Capital (PEK) is the only civil aviation airport that falls under BJS. The airport is located 20 km to the northeast of Beijing city center. Although many consider it to lie in Shunyi District, it is, in fact, an exclave of Chaoyang District, Beijing. The airport is a primary hub of operations for Air China, which flies to around 120 destinations (excluding cargo). It is also a hub for Hainan Airlines and China Southern Airlines. The airport expansion is largely funded by a 500-million-euro (USD 625 million) loan from the European Investment Bank (EIB). The loan is the largest ever granted by the EIB in Asia; the agreement was signed during the eighth China-EU Summit held in September 2005.[citation needed] Beijing Capital is today the busiest airport in the People's Republic of China, having registered double-digit growth annually since the SARS crisis of 2003. In 2004, it became the busiest airport in Asia by aircraft movements, overtaking Tokyo ...
- published: 05 Oct 2008
- views: 25270
- author: gordonblade2008
9:04
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (5 of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese:...
published: 05 Oct 2008
author: gordonblade2008
World's Biggest Airport - Beijing International (5 of 5)
Beijing Capital International Airport, (simplified Chinese: 北京首都国际机场; traditional Chinese: 北京首都國際機場; pinyin: Běijīng Shǒudū Guójì Jīchǎng) (IATA: PEK, ICAO: ZBAA) is the main international airport that serves the capital city of Beijing, People's Republic of China. The IATA Airport Code is PEK, reflecting Beijing's former Romanization Peking. The code BJS is also frequently used, reflecting the current pinyin spelling of Beijing and including all airports in the Beijing metropolitan area; currently, Beijing Capital (PEK) is the only civil aviation airport that falls under BJS. The airport is located 20 km to the northeast of Beijing city center. Although many consider it to lie in Shunyi District, it is, in fact, an exclave of Chaoyang District, Beijing. The airport is a primary hub of operations for Air China, which flies to around 120 destinations (excluding cargo). It is also a hub for Hainan Airlines and China Southern Airlines. The airport expansion is largely funded by a 500-million-euro (USD 625 million) loan from the European Investment Bank (EIB). The loan is the largest ever granted by the EIB in Asia; the agreement was signed during the eighth China-EU Summit held in September 2005.[citation needed] Beijing Capital is today the busiest airport in the People's Republic of China, having registered double-digit growth annually since the SARS crisis of 2003. In 2004, it became the busiest airport in Asia by aircraft movements, overtaking Tokyo ...
- published: 05 Oct 2008
- views: 23493
- author: gordonblade2008
2:15
BBC Interview Capt Naser Amer- Evidence that Algeria is Helping Gaddafi
Translation This is an interview with a Libyan pilot who received some documents showing t...
published: 16 Mar 2011
author: Libyanym
BBC Interview Capt Naser Amer- Evidence that Algeria is Helping Gaddafi
Translation This is an interview with a Libyan pilot who received some documents showing the Algerian military is assisting the Gaddafi regime. Translation to English: Captain Nasr Ammar: "I thank the Arabic BBC channel.. In fact, I have in my possession some very important documents (link below shows the documents) that truly prove the culpability of Algeria, the Algerian government, the Algerian Airlines, and the Algerian Air Force. These documents, my honoured brother, have the registration numbers of many Algerian airplanes that start with the number 7T; in English the reference is "seven tango". The kind of aircrafts that I have documents on are of either three or four types of aircraft, or five to be truthful with you. In regard to the Algerian forces, it sent planes which were civilian planes used to transport soldiers, military equipment, ammunitions, and others. What I have in my position now are many documents, and I did not have enough time to go over it all..." BBC newsman interrupts: " Where did you obtain these documents?" Captain Nasr Ammar: " I got them from an air traffic controller by the name of Abdulallah Al-Turki who is now in Benghazi. He sent me these documents, and I spoke with him. He sent me these documents and I have been reviewing them as he sent them also to the Almanara channel (Almanara TV or Almanara.org) in Switzerland here... a Libyan channel, and they called upon me to clarify these documents. In front of me are some documents that show ...
- published: 16 Mar 2011
- views: 2837
- author: Libyanym
7:14
Sri Lanka Builds a New International Airport Hambanthota -
Hambanthota Airport. The Mattala International Airport is an international airport current...
published: 15 Dec 2010
author: NoEalamInSL Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka Builds a New International Airport Hambanthota -
Hambanthota Airport. The Mattala International Airport is an international airport currently under construction in Mattala, in the Hambantota District in the south of Sri Lanka. Upon completion, the Mattala International Airport will be Sri Lanka's second international airport, joining the Bandaranaike International Airport. It will primarily serve the city of Hambantota, along with the southern and eastern parts of Sri Lanka. Initial plans were to build an international airport serving the south of Sri Lanka at Weerawila, but these plans were scrapped due to environmental concerns. The site was then moved to Mattala, a small town located 15 kilometers north of Hambantota. Construction on the $200 million first phase of the airport began in November 2009, and is expected to be completed by December 2011, with the first flight scheduled to land in January 2012. The new Hambantota International Airport is expected to expand the local aviation industry whilst being a catalyst for the country's economic development enabling international trade, tourism, vocational training and employment. It is also being implemented as an eco friendly project. The airport is estimated to cost US $210 million and by the end of construction will cover 2000 hectares in total.[1] The new airport is being built to be compatible with the latest Airbus A380 aircraft and has been designed according to recommendations of the International Civil Aviation Organization. The airport is designed to ...
- published: 15 Dec 2010
- views: 4901
- author: NoEalamInSL Sri Lanka
7:29
Freeport Bahamas
Freeport is a city and free trade zone on the island of Grand Bahama, located approximatel...
published: 13 Sep 2009
author: Donald Pugh
Freeport Bahamas
Freeport is a city and free trade zone on the island of Grand Bahama, located approximately 100 mi (160 km) east-northeast of Fort Lauderdale, South Florida and gives its name to a district of the Bahamas. Freeport proper has 26910 people. THE city of Freeport has grown to be the second most populated city in The Bahamas (26910 in 2000) after the capital, Nassau. The Grand Bahama Port Authority (GBPA) operates the free trade zone, under the Hawksbill Creek Agreement signed in August of 1955 whereby the Bahamian Government agreed that businesses in the Freeport area will pay no taxes before 2054. The area of the land grants has been increased to 138000 acres (558 km²). Freeport Harbour is accessible by even the largest vessels, and has a cruise terminal, a container port, and both a private yacht and ship maintenance facility. Grand Bahama International Airport (IATA airport code: FPO, ICAO airport code: MYGF) handles nearly 50000 flights each year. Tourism complements trade as a revenue earner in Freeport, with over a million visitors each year. Much of the tourist industry is displaced to the seaside suburb of Lucaya, owing its name (but little else) to the pre-Columbian Lucayan inhabitants of the island. The city is often promoted as 'Freeport / Lucaya'. WIKIPEDIA
- published: 13 Sep 2009
- views: 25704
- author: Donald Pugh
7:29
FREEPORT BAHAMAS LUCAYA GRAND BAHAMA ISLANDS
Freeport is a city and free trade zone on the island of Grand Bahama, located approximatel...
published: 23 Apr 2011
author: DonPugh1
FREEPORT BAHAMAS LUCAYA GRAND BAHAMA ISLANDS
Freeport is a city and free trade zone on the island of Grand Bahama, located approximately 100 mi (160 km) east-northeast of Fort Lauderdale, South Florida and gives its name to a district of the Bahamas. Freeport proper has 26910 people. THE city of Freeport has grown to be the second most populated city in The Bahamas (26910 in 2000) after the capital, Nassau. The Grand Bahama Port Authority (GBPA) operates the free trade zone, under the Hawksbill Creek Agreement signed in August of 1955 whereby the Bahamian Government agreed that businesses in the Freeport area will pay no taxes before 2054. The area of the land grants has been increased to 138000 acres (558 km²). Freeport Harbour is accessible by even the largest vessels, and has a cruise terminal, a container port, and both a private yacht and ship maintenance facility. Grand Bahama International Airport (IATA airport code: FPO, ICAO airport code: MYGF) handles nearly 50000 flights each year. Tourism complements trade as a revenue earner in Freeport, with over a million visitors each year. Much of the tourist industry is displaced to the seaside suburb of Lucaya, owing its name (but little else) to the pre-Columbian Lucayan inhabitants of the island. The city is often promoted as 'Freeport / Lucaya'. WIKIPEDIA DON PUGH
- published: 23 Apr 2011
- views: 2043
- author: DonPugh1
0:55
Pakistani Plane lands in Hambantota,Sri Lanka marking the opening of the brand new airport
Translation-Inaugural test flight landed in the airport at 12.38 pm on 16th October 2012. ...
published: 07 Nov 2012
author: Chamath5
Pakistani Plane lands in Hambantota,Sri Lanka marking the opening of the brand new airport
Translation-Inaugural test flight landed in the airport at 12.38 pm on 16th October 2012. The first plane was a Hawker Beechcraft B200 registered as AP-CAB in Pakistan. It was a instrument testing aircraft fitted with ATC testing equipments. The test flights will be continued for 8 days for testing the ILS and other flight controls fixed in the new airport. Thanks you Pakistan from Sri Lanka. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Hambantota International Airport is an international airport serving the city of Hambantota in southeast Sri Lanka. Upon completion, Hambantota International Airport will be Sri Lanka's third international airport, after Bandaranaike International Airport and Ratmalana International Airport of Colombo. It will also serve as the secondary hub for both Sri Lankan Airlines and Mihin Lanka. It was initially planned to build an international airport serving the south of Sri Lanka at Weerawila, but the plans were scrapped due to environmental concerns. The site was then moved to Mattala, a small town located 15 kilometres north of Hambantota. Construction on the $209 million[1] first phase of the airport began in November 2009, and is expected to be completed by October 2012. The new international airport is expected to expand the local aviation industry whilst being a catalyst for the country's economic development enabling international trade, tourism ...
- published: 07 Nov 2012
- views: 855
- author: Chamath5
5:47
Landings in Lanzarote (GCRR Airport ICAO CODE)
September 2010. Thursday. View of airport, nearby and aircraft....
published: 04 Sep 2010
author: fjvolcan
Landings in Lanzarote (GCRR Airport ICAO CODE)
September 2010. Thursday. View of airport, nearby and aircraft.
- published: 04 Sep 2010
- views: 354
- author: fjvolcan
1:54
MMRDA firms up plans to accommodate Navi Mumbai Airport
The proposed Navi Mumbai International Airport is a new international airport, which is to...
published: 20 Nov 2011
author: shahsonsindia
MMRDA firms up plans to accommodate Navi Mumbai Airport
The proposed Navi Mumbai International Airport is a new international airport, which is to come up at Kopra-Panvel area, is being built through public-private partnership (PPP) — with private sector partner getting 74% equity while Airports Authority of India (AAI) and Govt of Maharashtra (through City and Industrial Development Corporation or CIDCO) holding 13% each. The location of the proposed airport at Navi Mumbai has been considered on several parameters. Prominent among these is the fact that Navi Mumbai is expected to absorb the future growth in population, business and commercial activity of the region. The availability of physical and social infrastructure coupled with environmental friendly site with minimum resettlement and rehabilitation makes the Navi Mumbai airport project technically and financially viable. The airport would be one of world's few ''greenfield'' international state-of-art airport offering world class facilities to passengers cargo, aircrafts and airlines. The site of airport is located in an area of 1140 hectares accommodating two parallel runways for independent parallel operation with provision of full length taxi ways on either side of the runways. The airfield has been designed to accommodate the new large aircrafts compatible to aerodrome code 4-F, conforming to specifications of International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO). Navi Mumbai International Airport will support the rapidly growing air travel needs of Mumbai Metropolitan ...
- published: 20 Nov 2011
- views: 390
- author: shahsonsindia
Youtube results:
10:04
BOEING 747 CRASH CVR COCKPIT VOICE ROCORDING CFIT BLACK BOX RECORDING
On February 19, 1989, a Boeing 747-249F operating as Flying Tiger Flight 66 was flying an ...
published: 09 Sep 2011
author: foxkill7
BOEING 747 CRASH CVR COCKPIT VOICE ROCORDING CFIT BLACK BOX RECORDING
On February 19, 1989, a Boeing 747-249F operating as Flying Tiger Flight 66 was flying an international cargo flight from Singapore to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The aircraft impacted terrain 12 miles from the airport, resulting in 4 fatalities. The aircraft was assigned an non-directional beacon (NDB) approach to Runway 33 at Sultan Abdul Aziz Shah Airport, Kuala Lumpur, after having flown 30 minutes from Singapore Changi Airport.[1] In descent, the flight was cleared to "Kayell" with a morse code of "KL" of which four separate points on the ground were commonly called by Malaysian ATC albeit with different frequencies. Two separate radio beacons were identically coded "KL" as well as the VOR abbreviation (Kuala Lumpur shortened to "KL") and the airport was also sometimes referred to as "KL" by local ATC (instead of the full "Kuala Lumpur"). The crew was unsure to which point they were cleared, and the cockpit voice recorder revealed that the crew argued about which radios should be set to which frequencies and which approach was actually going to be conducted. (Even in the last few moments of the flight, the captain referenced the ILS approach for runway 33 which was notamed as inop on the flight release and the ATIS, additionally the crew was told by ATC that the ILS approach was not available.) ATC radioed to the flight, "Tiger 66, descend two four zero zero [2400 ft]. Cleared for NDB approach runway three three." The captain of Tiger 66, who heard "descend to four zero ...
- published: 09 Sep 2011
- views: 51242
- author: foxkill7
3:53
Athens International Airport (ICAO Code "LGAV") - September 2010
Some footage taken in LGAV with a Samsung Camcoder....
published: 16 Nov 2010
author: Gepapad0
Athens International Airport (ICAO Code "LGAV") - September 2010
Some footage taken in LGAV with a Samsung Camcoder.
- published: 16 Nov 2010
- views: 203
- author: Gepapad0
4:00
TheFlightHD - Schiphol Airport Amsterdam
Airport Code: IATA: AMS ICAO/OACI: EHAM...
published: 18 Nov 2011
author: TheFlightHD
TheFlightHD - Schiphol Airport Amsterdam
Airport Code: IATA: AMS ICAO/OACI: EHAM
- published: 18 Nov 2011
- views: 71
- author: TheFlightHD
1:33
Crazy Saba Landing (cockpit view).
Enjoy a cockpit view of landing at one of the shortest commercial airstrips in the world: ...
published: 19 Dec 2006
author: rutgergeerling
Crazy Saba Landing (cockpit view).
Enjoy a cockpit view of landing at one of the shortest commercial airstrips in the world: Saba's vulcanic mini-396 meter runway at Yrasquin Airport. Airplane is a de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter. Airport code: (IATA: SAB, ICAO: TNCS) Check out my Caribbean wallpapers at www.fotograferen.net
- published: 19 Dec 2006
- views: 832098
- author: rutgergeerling