Khazen

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Hamat airport in Lebanon

By Gulf news – Joseph A. Kechichian – Beirut: Lebanese MP Riad Rahal, a member of the Future Movement from
the Akkar region, north of Tripoli, has urged officials to “begin work
to revamp the Qlay‘at Military Airfield into a civilian airport
immediately.” A statement issued on Saturday by The Movement of
Public Opinion in Akkar [MPOA], a new civil society organisation, hailed
the social media campaign as a long overdue initiative. Although
the relatively neglected Akkar region provides Lebanon with a vast pool
of young men who serve in the armed forces, it also houses a key
airfield, the Rene Mouawad Airbase — Qlay‘at, named after the
head-of-state assassinated in 1989, and which hosts a helicopter wing. Officials now want to revitalise the region and, simultaneously, encourage Lebanon to have a second international gateway. In
fact, Qlay‘at offers a strategic alternative to Rafik Hariri
International Airport [RHIA], which is located in Beirut’s southern
suburbs, Dahiyah, and which poses potential security risks as its
perimeter fence is too close to various Hezbollah strongholds.

Over the years, a controversial debate preoccupied the Lebanese to
find an alternative civilian facility — whether at Qlay‘at or the Rayaq
Airbase in the Bekaa Valley — precisely to avoid serious security
breaches at RHIA. The Qlay‘at facility has a 3,600-metre by
60-metre concrete runway and there are warehouses for fuel, areas for
maintenance, spare parts, telecoms devices and radars.

All can be
rehabilitated within a very short period of time, with plenty of room to
build a large-scale civilian terminal capable of supplementing the
capital’s facility. A major rally in favour of the plans for a
civilian airport organised by the MPOA was to take place on Sunday in
the Tal Hayat area in Akkar under the slogan: “Qlay‘at … is flying”. Qlay‘at hosted intermittent passenger flights during the civil war (1975-1990). Many
Lebanese believe that the time is past due to renovate the Qlay‘at
facility not only to improve economic conditions in north Lebanon but,
and equally important, because most seek genuine security when they
travel. While strides were recently made at RHIA, it is often held hostage to Lebanese politics.