English/Nat
Gaza International Airport is finally opened.
After years of negotiations, fund-raising and hope, the
Palestinian people are moving one step closer to nationhood.
Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat was to greet the first arrival, a plane carrying government officials from
Cairo.
Last minute preparations and security checks were still being carried out hours before the first plane was due to arrive.
Gaza International Airport was officially opened by Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat as he welcomed the first plane to land.
Arafat will fly on his presidential plane for the first time out of his homeland to
Paris to meet with
French President Jacques Chirac.
Until now, Arafat has had to drive to
Egypt, where his plane was kept, and fly on from there.
Palestine Airlines, with a small fleet that includes one
Boeing 727, will begin direct flights to
Jordan, Egypt and
Morocco next week.
But for now all attention was on the Egypt Air plane - the first arrival at the new airport.
Despite its shortcomings, many
Palestinians consider the airport a big step toward independence.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
"This is a great day, a great achievement for all the Palestinian people."
SUPER CAPTION: Fayez Zaidan, chairman of Palestinian
Civil Aviation Authority
But only hours before the first flights arrived, the control tower was still without controls, the check-in counter had no computers and the runway was missing flood lights for night
landings.
Until the floodlights arrive, there will be no night flights.
Palestinian officials said most for the equipment was being held up at the
Israeli shipping port of
Ashdod. The opening of their own seaport is next on the Palestinian wish list and was promised under the Wye agreement.
Civil aviation contracts with other carriers are in the works and expanded service plans include weekly flights to
Cyprus and
Japan.
The airport opening had been held up for two years because of disputes between
Israel and Arafat's autonomous government over Israel's security role.
Israel will have a say over who and what enters
Gaza, but the Israeli monitors will operate discretely, behind one-way mirrors, as they do now at two other crossings into autonomous
Palestinian areas.
Israel will not interfere with departures from the airport.
The airport protocol was signed last week, as part of the
Wye River peace deal signed last month by Israel and the Palestinians.
For those living in the small, overcrowded
Gaza Strip, which is ringed by the
Mediterranean on one side and by barbed wire on the other three, it may help ease the
ever-present feeling of being trapped
.
In the past, Palestinians wanting to fly abroad needed permission to enter Israel and fly out of the international airport near
Tel Aviv.
Israel rarely granted permission, however, forcing Palestinians to travel through Israeli-controlled land routes to Egypt or Jordan to catch flights.
West Bank Palestinians, separated from Gaza by Israel, will still need Israeli permission to travel to the
Gaza airport.
Designed in an
Oriental style with elaborate tiles imported from Morocco, the airport has one passenger terminal, a
VIP lounge and a three-kilometre (two-mile)-long runway.
For the time being,
Israelis will not be permitted to use the airport because of security concerns.
However, many believe
Gaza International will eventually rival
Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
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