Senegal’s president opened a flagship new airport yesterday seen as the central plank of government plans to boost the economy and create a west African regional hub.
President Macky Sall toured the brand new Blaise Diagne International Airport accompanied by several west African heads of state in the town of Diass, 47km from the capital of Dakar, while a plane from new airline Air Senegal made the first symbolic takeoff in the afternoon.
Sall’s supporters gathered in their thousands to celebrate the opening, banging drums and chanting slogans outside, according to AFP journalists at the scene.
The airport will be a key test of Senegal’s economic fortunes as the president seeks re-election in 2019.
Work began in 2007 on the $767mn airport under former president Abdoulaye Wade, but unforeseen problems and a change of construction company have repeatedly delayed the project and doubled anticipated costs.
Blaise Diagne – named after the Senegalese MP who was the first African elected to France’s parliament – is at the heart of Sall’s “Emerging Senegal” plan, which includes the construction of a new city, Diamniadio, close to the site in Diass.
As the country invests more heavily in tourism, Senegal is also betting on the facility’s strategic position close to several beach resorts that are already heavily frequented by European holidaymakers.
“The airport will be key in the promotion of ‘Destination Senegal’,” Prime Minister Mahamed Boun Abdallah Dionne said in a speech on Tuesday, adding that airport services at the site would contribute to the development of the special economic zone nearby.
With a capacity of 3mn passengers, Blaise Diagne will still rank far below the busiest African airports and a long way off challenging Nigeria in the west African region, though plans for up to 10mn travellers are in the pipeline, according to officials.
Passenger numbers have increased in recent years at Dakar’s current airport in the middle of the city, leading to long waits at security and contributing to chronic traffic jams, and the old Leopold Sedar Senghor airport will become a military airfield from today.
The new airport boasts six footbridges direct to flight cabins, and will be able to service a range of aircraft including Airbus’s massive A380s.
Work was completed on the 4,500-hectare site – with 2,000 hectares unused in case of required expansion – by Turkish consortium Summa-Limak after a disagreement with Saudi Arabia’s Bin Laden construction derailed the final stage of preparations.
But bets on whether Blaise Diagne would open on time have lasted until the last minute amid complaints by major European airlines over fuel capacity and regulations.
Summa-Limak will operate the airport for the next 25 years, furthering ever-closer economic ties between Ankara and Dakar.
A train linking the airport with the city is not expected to open for years, leaving taxi drivers in pocket but ordinary travellers nervous of arriving on time for flights in a city with unpredictable traffic.
Backed by loans from France’s development agency the African Development Bank (ADB), the West African Development Bank (BOAD) and Islamic lender the Islamic Development Bank (IDB), officials are celebrating the airport’s completion – but the future of Senegal’s new airline is less certain.
Air Senegal still does not have all the licences required to begin commercial flights and has a fleet of just two ATR 72-600s, but Aviation Minister Maimouna Ndoye Seck said international ambitions for the airport meant a well-performing national airline was “a necessity”.

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