Nativename: | যশোর বিমানবন্দর |
Jashore Airport | |
Iata: | JSR |
Icao: | VGJR |
Type: | Military & Public |
Owner: | Ministry of Civil Aviation and Tourism |
Operator: | Civil Aviation Authority of Bangladesh |
City-Served: | Jashore & Khulna |
Location: | Arabpur, Jashore |
Elevation-F: | 20 |
Pushpin Map: | Bangladesh |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of airport in Bangladesh |
Pushpin Label: | JSR |
Pushpin Label Position: | right |
R1-Number: | 16/34 |
R1-Length-F: | 8,000 |
R1-Length-M: | 2,438 |
R1-Surface: | Asphalt |
Stat-Year: | January 2023 – December 2023 |
Stat1-Header: | Passengers |
Stat1-Data: | 1,75,596 |
Stat2-Header: | Aircraft movements |
Stat3-Header: | Cargo tonnage |
Footnotes: | Source:[1] |
Built: | as RAF Base, Jashore |
Jashore Airport is a domestic airport in Jashore, Bangladesh that is operated and maintained by the Civil Aviation Authority. It is also used by the Bangladesh Air Force as part of BAF Matiur Rahman Base and training airfield for the Bangladesh Air Force Academy. Currently it has seven daily flights to Dhaka and a weekly flight to Cox's Bazar. It is the only operational airport of the Khulna Division and the fifth busiest airport of Bangladesh.[2]
Jessore Airport was established by the Royal Air Force in 1940 to protect British India from Japanese aggression during World War II. When British India gained independence after World War II, the Government of Pakistan opened the airport as a base for the Pakistan Air Force. Later in 1951 Pakistan International Airlines started operating flights from Jessore to Dhaka, Karachi, Lahore and Chattogram. At that time they operated only two flights a week from Dhaka to Jessore. And from 1951 to March 1971, the airport was used jointly by Pakistan International Airlines and Pakistan Air Force. When the war of independence started in Bangladesh in March 1971, Pakistan Air Force started using it for conducting war activities. On 6 December 1971, a Joint force of the Indian Army and the Liberation Army invaded East Pakistan, causing extensive damage to the airport. And when the city of Jessore fell, the entire Jessore District, including the airport, came under the joint forces of the Indian Army and the Liberation Army. And the Indian Air Force compensates the airport and makes it usable. Later, when Bangladesh became independent in 1972, the Indian Air Force handed over to the Bangladesh Air Force and Biman Bangladesh Airlines resumed flights from Dhaka to Jessore.[3]
On 31 July 2023, a new terminal building constructed at a cost of was inaugurated by the State Minister for Ministry of Civil Aviation and Tourism, Md. Mahbub Ali.[4] The new terminal building will be able to handle 1 million passengers per year and it consists of eight check-in counters, five luggage scanning machines, five archways, VIP lounges, and car parking.[5]
In order to make the airport an international standard another project worth has been taken to upgrade the runway.[6]