Harar Meda Airport

Summary
Airport typeMilitary
OwnerEthiopian National Defense Force
OperatorEthiopian Air Force
LocationBishoftu, Oromia
Elevation AMSL6,201 ft / 1,890 m
Coordinates8°42′59″N 39°00′21″E / 8.7163°N 39.0059°E / 8.7163; 39.0059
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
16/34 5,940 1,811 Asphalt

Harar Meda Airport (Amharic: ሐረር ሜዳ) (IATA: QHR, ICAO: HAHM) is an airport in Bishoftu, Oromia, Ethiopia. It is the main base for the Ethiopian Air Force.

History

In 1946, the beginnings of what became the Ethiopian Air Force were moved from Lideta Airfield in Addis Ababa to Bishoftu. The former facility was instead utilized by Ethiopian Airlines. The initial group of 19 Swedes under Count Carl Gustaf von Rosen, who were to train the pilots and support personal, arrived there after leaving Sweden between 9 January and 16 July 1946. Both Ethiopian cadets and the Swedish instructors took part in constructing the first buildings on the base. Six Saab 91 Safir training airplanes were bought in Sweden and flown to the new airbase on 24 December 1946. On 10 November 1947, a fleet of 16 Saab-built B-17s was landed at Bishoftu by Swedish pilots.[1]

The airport has been used for civilian operations in the past, mainly when Bole Airport was unserviceable due to construction works. In 2005, the airport served 101,839 passengers.

2012 satellite imagery shows a number of helicopters, fighters and transport aircraft are based there.

References

  1. Cooper, Tom (2015). Wings Over Ogaden: The Ethiopian–Somali War, 1978–1979. Helion. pp. 9–10. ISBN 9781910777503.


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