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Terminal illness: The ghost airports in India where the only thing that flies are the pigeons

The main hubs are bursting but India has spent more than US$50 million since 2009 on eight airports that do not get scheduled flights.

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Not one passenger has passed through the gates of an airport big enough to handle more than 300,000 travellers a year, with bays for three narrow-body jets. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Two and a half years after the completion of a new US$17 million terminal building, the airport in Jaisalmer, a small and remote desert city in India's western Rajasthan state, stands empty.

Not a single passenger has passed through the gates of an airport big enough to handle more than 300,000 travellers a year, with parking bays for three 180-seater narrow-body jets.

India has spent more than US$50 million since 2009 on eight airports that do not receive scheduled flights - white elephants that are a reminder of the pitfalls for Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he bets on an infrastructure drive to fuel growth.

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India's main hubs, meanwhile, are bursting at the seams, slowing airlines' ability to ex-pand in a vast country where they should be supporting economic growth.

"They [the government] need to realise it's not a case of 'build the airport and we will come'," said Sanjiv Kapoor, chief operating officer at SpiceJet. The private sector airline last year ceased flying to a new airport in the southern Indian city of Mysore because of insufficient demand.

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India has spent more than US$50 million since 2009 on eight airports that do not receive scheduled flights. Photo: Reuters
India has spent more than US$50 million since 2009 on eight airports that do not receive scheduled flights. Photo: Reuters
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