Sialkot International Airport Takes Off

Posted on December 4, 2007
Filed Under >Owais Mughal, Economy & Development, Travel
83 Comments
Total Views: 142342

Owais Mughal

A small yet significant news caught my attention the other day. On November 30, 2007, Sialkot International Airport got its inaugural commercial flight. Pakistan thus adds one more feather in its infrastructure development. The IATA designation of this airport is SKT. It is now the 45th public airport/air strip in Pakistan. There was an inaugural Boeing 737, PIA flight from Karachi the same day, which landed at Sialkot International Airport with 118 passengers. Currently the only flights available to and from Sialkot are from Karachi but very soon Sialkot will get direct overseas flights.

Sialkot International Airport has been built by the local business community on a “self-help basis” at a cost of US $33 million. Sialkot is very fortunate in a sense that local business community plays a vital role in its development. To build, own and operate this airport a company was established in 2001. It is called the Sialkot International Airport Limited (SIAL).

SIAL is a company with 223 directors, each of which has invested Rs 5m of capital in the project as the primary investment. Each of the directors was invited to take part in the project because of their previous experience of running sizeable and successful enterprises.

In order to construct the new airport SIAL contracted NESPAK to develop the master plan and after much deliberation and consultation over two years a fully integrated plan was finalised and approved by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA).

Sialkot International Airport is located 14 km west of Sialkot and is spread over an area of 1050 acres. It also has the longest commercial runway in Pakistan. The runway length is 3.6 km and width is 45m with 7.5m wide shoulders on either side. Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has graded this runway as 4E.




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The Link Taxiway is 263-meter long, 23-meter wide with 10.5-meter shoulders. The apron covers an area of 45000 sq meters and the airport can nose-in park four Boeing 747s simultaneously.

The construction of the airport was approved in 2001, the construction work started in January 2003 and on March 26, 2005 the first ever plane landed here.

Following image shows convenient road distances from different cities which are projected to benefit from Sialkot International Airport.

10 km west of the airport flows river Chenab and currently there is a bridge called Shahbazpur Bridge under construction there. Once completed, the bridge will reduce the distance between the cities located at either side of the river. It will provide an easy access to the whole region including Sialkot International Airport, Sambrial Dry Port, Export Processing Zone Sialkot and the industries of Sialkot. It will help the airport to become a gateway for the people of Gujrat, Kharian, Lalamusa, Jhelum and Azad Kashmir. The work on this bridge started in 2005 and is expected to be ready in 2008.

Once the overseas flights start from Sialkot, it will become Pakistan’s 9th International airport. Current International Airports of Pakistan are:

1. Jinnah International Airport Karachi (KHI),
2. Allama Iqbal International Airport Lahore (LHE),
3. Islamabad International Airport (ISB),
4. Peshawar International Airport (PEW),
5. Quetta International Airport (QET),
6. Shaikh Zayed International Airport Rahimyar Khan (RYK),
7. Gwadar International Airport (GWD), and
8. Turbat International Airport (TUK).

References:

1. Sialkot International Airport Limited (SIAL)
2. NESPAK

83 responses to “Sialkot International Airport Takes Off”

  1. Rafay Kashmiri says:

    RE

    @you must be working with Pakistan Tourism, you have
    put every thing about Sialkot (silkot) Ali.m.m.khan must
    be the happiest Sialkotia on earth today, I am so happy to
    have it, I wish could visit that city with such history,
    BTW you forgot to mention the culprit’s details who
    allocated controversially Gurdaspur, Pathankot and others
    is known as the damned colonial anti-Pakistan vengeance
    ” Radcliff award”.

  2. Rafay Kashmiri says:

    ali.m.m. khan,
    Voyage in 18th century Amritsar

    @Sufi Risala 1910, 20
    I have to begin with my Nana jan, Mohammed Hussain
    Khushnood,(died 1935) head post-man in Amritsar, a Sufi poet in Farsi Urdu, Punjabi Sarieky, Gormukhy, studied in Anjuman….high School had a bosom friend, class mate, Family relative called Sufi Tabassum a great poet of
    Pakistan who died in mid eighties (if correct), my Nana jan who was a Sufi of silsila Nakshbandia, very active poet,
    both of them won many awards, my Nana’s poetry and medals are still preserved in Amritsar’s Darbar Saheb museum, both of them had to skip Khalisa College
    admission because of the Political unrest.
    Anyway, the last I met Sufi Tabas was in Lahore in 1979,
    as perhaps you know that all the Kashmiris have their one Nani, i.e. they are all linked with family relations, Sufi being very old, told us about his young age, and there he told us about a monthly published some thing to do with Tassawuf and that Iqbal was writing articles or editing, of course, Iqbal being his hero etc etc. I don’t know if you are able to get some old copies ? If some body know about it can please
    contact us !! I contacted Amritsar’s Darbar museum and waiting for a reply (for my Nan’s poetry). I was disappointed when I heard that Indira’s assault had damaged the museum, I hope would be able to see my Nana’s Kalam once in my life time.

  3. ali m.m. khan says:

    RAfay: would you by any chance know of a magazine published in the 1910-20’s from gujrat called SUFI RISALA, iqbal was its editor for one years or so…The publisher was a gentelman by the name of sufi mohammad din…of pind bahaudin..Any info would be much appreciated..

  4. ali m.m. khan says:

    Rafay: I did not know that iqbal is referred to as hakeem-ul-ummat..But i do know about him. I am familiar with the chaminda battle and sialkots contribution ot the fauj although more faujis are recruited from jhelum district and surrounding areas. liek pind dadankhan, malik wal, etc etc..
    I disagree with you regards to sufism being a term coined at later stages or and not being a term within islam….It comes from the word saf…which means clean/pure and also means ranks.
    During the time of the Rasool (saw), in medina. there were some sahaba who were known as sahaba -e- saf.. Threy wore wollen garments and emersed themselves in contant zikr. They used to sit right next to the house of the prophet(saw). their “sitting” place is still marked in the medina mosque, as a raised platform. with a small railing around it…this place was termed by the rasool (saw) as a piece of jannat by the prophet(saw). they were the first sufis….

  5. RE says:

    Kent = Cant
    sorry for miss spell.

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