By DPA
Yangon : Yangon International Airport on Friday opened its new passenger terminal with a capacity to handle 2.7 million visitors a year, state officials said.
"The new terminal building can handle 1,800 passengers per hour and 2.7 million per year, and five aircraft can land per hour," said Myanmar's transport minister, Major General Thein Swe.
The terminal, which cost $13.3 million, was built by the privately owned Asia World Company, a Myanmar construction company.
Myanmar has been subject to economic sanctions and a cut off from funds from development banks, such as the World Bank and Asia Development Bank, since 1988 when the military launched a bloody crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrations that left an estimated 3,000 people dead.
Over the past 19 years, nearly all development projects have been self-financed, with many of them handed over to well-connected Myanmar private companies in return for forestry concessions or special business licenses.
"Prior to 1988, the Yangon International Airport was the only airport that could accommodate large aircraft," said Lieutenant General Thein Sein, first secretary of the State Peace and Development Council.
"But now, there are seven airports, including Mandalay International Airport, where Boeing 747 aircraft can land and 13 airports where aircraft up to Boeing 737 size can land," said Thein Sein, who attended the Yangon terminal opening ceremony.
Airlines that currently offer regular flights to Yangon include Thai Airways, Myanma Airways, Silk Air, Indian Airlines, Mandarin Airlines, Air China, Qatar Airways, Jetstar Asia, Malaysia Airlines, Bangkok Airways and Thai Air Asia.