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Sanaa International Airport

Coordinates: 15°28′35″N 044°13′11″E / 15.47639°N 44.21972°E / 15.47639; 44.21972
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El Rahaba Airport (Sana'a International)
  • IATA: SAH
  • ICAO: OYSN
    SAH is located in Yemen
    SAH
    SAH
    Location of airport in Yemen
Summary
Airport typeMilitary/Public
OperatorN/A
LocationSana'a
Hub forYemenia
Elevation AMSL7,216 ft / 2,199 m
Coordinates15°28′35″N 044°13′11″E / 15.47639°N 44.21972°E / 15.47639; 44.21972
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
18/36 10,669 3,252 Asphalt
Three Ilyushin Il-76 aircraft of Yemenia parked at Sana'a International Airport (2005).

Sana'a International Airport or El Rahaba Airport (Sana'a International) (IATA: SAH, ICAO: OYSN) is an international airport located in Sana'a, the capital of Yemen. The runway is shared with a large military base with several fighter jets and transport aircraft of the Yemeni Air Force.

Airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
EgyptAirCairo
EmiratesDubai
Felix AirwaysAbha, Aden, Al Ghaydah, Ataq, Bahrain, Dammam, Djibouti, Hodeidah, Riyan Mukalla, Seiyun, Socotra, Ta'izz
FlydubaiDubai
Gulf AirBahrain
Qatar AirwaysDoha
Royal JordanianAmman-Queen Alia
SaudiaJeddah, Riyadh
Turkish AirlinesIstanbul-Atatürk
YemeniaAbu Dhabi, Addis Ababa, Aden, Amman, Asmara, Cairo, Dar-es-Salaam, Djibouti, Doha, Dubai, Frankfurt, Hodeidah, Jakarta-Soekarno-Hatta, Jeddah, Khartoum, Kuala Lumpur, Kuwait, Mumbai, Nairobi, Riyadh, Riyan, Sayun, Ta'izz
  • Note: All flights operate from a single terminal. A second terminal was expected to open in 2009, but is still under construction as at January 2011.

Cargo airlines

AirlinesDestinations
Emirates SkyCargoDubai

Accidents and incidents

  • On October 30, 2011, a shelling attack by opposition tribesmen on the neighboring Air Force base damaged the airport's runway, forcing incoming flights to be diverted to Aden. There were no reports of casualties, although an ammunition storage and two fighter jets were destroyed.[2]

References

  1. ^ Yemeni plane crashes with 150 aboard
  2. ^ "UPDATE 2 — Mortar shells hit Yemeni Air Force Base, destroying two fighter jets". BNO News. Retrieved 31 October 2011.

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