President Ilham Aliyev and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan have inaugurated Fuzuli International Airport, which is the first airport built in Azerbaijan’s newly-liberated Karabakh region.
Erdogan arrived in Azerbaijan today to inaugurate the airport becoming the first head of state to land at the Fuzuli International Airport.
The groundbreaking ceremony for the airport’s construction took place back on 14 January during Aliyev’s visit to Fuzuli city that was liberated on October 17 after three decades of Armenian occupation.
The construction of international airports in Lachin and Zangilan regions is also underway in Azerbaijan’s newly-won territories.
The first test flight to Fuzuli was performed on September 5. The airport is approximately 100 kilometers (62 miles) from Shusha and 300 kilometers from the capital Baku and was granted the “international airport” status upon Prime Minister Ali Asadov’s decree on October 16.
The runway of the airport is 3,000 meters and the width is 60 meters. It is equipped with instrumental landing, navigation and control systems, to ensure flight safety. Turkish companies also participated in the construction of the airport.
It should be noted that this was the Turkish president’s third visit to Azerbaijan since Azerbaijan’s victory in last year’s war with Armenia. Earlier, Erdogan attended the military parade held in Baku in December to celebrate Azerbaijan’s victory and also visited historic Shusha city in Nagorno-Karabakh in June where the two presidents signed the Shusha Declaration that cemented the defence cooperation and also focused on setting up new transportation routes.
Fuzuli along with 300 city centers, settlements and regions was liberated during last year’s six-week war that saw Azerbaijan regain control over most of its territories in and around the Nagorno-Karabakh region that had been under the Armenian occupation since the war in the early 1990s.