Kawthaung Airport (Burmese: ကော့သောင် လေဆိပ်; (IATA: KAW, ICAO: VYKT)) is an airport in Kawthaung, Myanmar. The airport has a very small terminal with no gates. The airport has an 1,800 by 50 metres (5,910 ft × 160 ft) runway.

Kawthaung Airport

ကော့သောင် လေဆိပ်
Summary
Airport typePublic
ServesKawthaung
LocationKawthaung, Myanmar
Elevation AMSL12.5 m / 41 ft
Coordinates10°02′57.33″N 098°32′16.82″E / 10.0492583°N 98.5380056°E / 10.0492583; 98.5380056
Map
KAW is located in Myanmar
KAW
KAW
Location of airport in Myanmar
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
02/20 1,829 6,000 Asphalt

Airlines and destinations edit

AirlinesDestinations
Air KBZ Dawei, Yangon
Myanmar National Airlines Dawei, Myeik, Yangon

Incidents and occurrences edit

The airport has suffered eleven accidents. Two airplanes were Chinese-made MA60s. and the other nine were Fokker 27s and 28s. The last incident on the ASN Aviation Safety Database[1] was on 10 June 2013.

On 10 June 2013 a Xian MA60 passenger plane, Myanma Airways Flight 309,[2] registered XY-AIP, sustained damage in a runway excursion accident at Kawthaung Airport (KAW), Myanmar. There were 64 persons on board, no one was injured. The Myanma Airways airplane operated on a domestic flight from Yangon to Mawlamyine and Kawthaung. Departing Mawlamyine at 11:10 hours local time, the flight was uneventful until the approach for landing. The aircraft was configured with landing gear when the “hydraulic pressure low”(LEFPL) warning light illuminated. After landing, the pilot started using manual braking and selected the nose gear to taxi mode. The airplane veered left and went off the runway, running into fence pillars, turning the aircraft 90 degrees to the left. The aircraft came to rest upon striking a tree with the left hand wing, 150 feet from the side of the runway.

References edit

  1. ^ Ranter, Harro. "Aviation Safety Network > ASN Aviation Safety Database > ASN Aviation Safety Database results". Aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  2. ^ Stacey, Daniel; Wong, Chun Han (21 March 2016). "A Tarnished Turboprop Clouds China's Aviation Dream". Wsj.com. Retrieved 16 November 2017.