Abdullahi Yusuf Airport

Abdullahi Yusuf Airport (IATA: GLK, ICAO: HCMR), formerly known as the Galkayo Airport, is an airport located in Galkayo, the capital of the north-central Mudug region of Somalia.

Abdullahi Yusuf Airport

Garoonka Diyaaradaha ee Cabdillahi Yuusuf
مطار عبد الله يوسف
Summary
Airport typePublic / Military
OwnerGovernment of Puntland[1]
ServesGalkayo, Somalia
Elevation AMSL975 ft / 297 m
Coordinates06°46′51″N 047°27′16″E
Map
GLK is located in Somalia
GLK
GLK
Location of airport in Somalia
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
05L/23R 9,859 3,006 Asphalt
05R/23L 9,859 3,006 Dirt

Overview

Like most of Galkayo, the Abdullahi Yusuf Airport is administered by the autonomous Puntland government.[4] It has acted as a buffer zone between the divided city's two main divisions. Taxes collected by the airport authority are split equally between the Puntland and Galmudug administrations, facilitating relations between the two regional authorities.[5]

On 25 March 2012, the facility was officially renamed in memory of the late Colonel Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, the former President of Somalia, who was born in Galkayo.[6]

Airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
Jubba Airways Garowe, Mogadishu

Accidents and incidents

Date Location Aircraft Tail number Aircraft damage Fatalities Description Refs
28 April 2012 Galkayo GR-Avia Antonov 3X-GEB W/O 0/36 A Jubba Airways aircraft on flight 6J-711 from Hargeisa to Galkayo veered right off runway 05L while landing in clear weather conditions. Captain indicated that his flight crew overflew so as to avoid collision with a goat or dog that had wandered onto the runway. The 32 passengers and 4 crew were not injured. However, the plane incurred significant damage. [7]

Non-aviation security incidents

On 7 April 2014 a Briton and a Frenchman working for the United Nations were shot dead by a man in a police uniform while they sat in their car at Galkayo airport. A U.N. mission spokesman said it was not clear who was behind the attack. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the U.N. Security Council both strongly condemned the attack and called on Somali authorities to bring the perpetrators to justice.[8] Then, on 2 October 2017 the airport's chief of security, Colonel Abdisalan Sanyare Owke and his bodyguard, were shot dead by a policeman. The assailant's motive was not immediately clear.[9]

References


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