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The
biggest and the best - the newly inaugurated, state-of-the-art
Hyderabad airport - will be showcased alongside smaller ones,
like Kochi, Coimbatore, Amritsar and Gwalior, which lie in shambles,
officials from the channel revealed.
One
important question to be probed is why cities with killing air
traffic, Delhi, Mumbai or Kolkata, still have only one airport,
and also, how is the privatisation attempt working out against
claims like "You Awaiting a World Class Airport" seen
in hoardings on the entry point of Delhi's airports.
While
issues of civic amenities, hygiene, ease of getting luggage back
and public utilities at the airports would be gauged from the
people in general in the interview format, those of technicalities
such as runway conditions, bird hit frequency, near-miss collisions,
night landing will be understood from pilots and technical staff.
"While
India possesses the fastest growing aviation market in the world,
with the number of passengers growing exponentially, the adequate
infrastructure to support this growth is still lagging,"
says a statement from the channel.
The
series will culminate with a special one-hour show on 29 March
at 8 pm (repeat Sunday, 23 March at 12 pm) that will provide an
in-depth look at some of the upcoming, "world-class"
airports from around the country!
"A
massive project to expand, revamp and in some cases even build
entirely new alternative airports in India's biggest cities is
presently in progress," said top officials at the channel.
While
renovation work in Delhi and Mumbai is still underway, the new
airports in Bangalore and Hyderabad are ready and in the case
of the latter, been recently inaugurated.
"CNN-IBN's
State of Indian Airports will not only look at these four
big cities but also lay focus on some of the country's smaller
airports."
The
weeklong newswheel stories will be substantiated by a nationwide
poll conducted by AC Nielsen that will assess factors like the
facilities available, user satisfaction, connectivity, quality
of infrastructure, the pros and cons of privatisations
"State
of Indian Airports is intended to depict the public's dissatisfaction
with the current state of most airports in the country, their
inability to cope with the increasing passenger traffic, show
successful examples of smaller airports and raise debates on issues
like why bigger cities cannot have multiple airports," the
channel says.
"State
of Indian Airports brings viewers a close glimpse of the real
condition of some of India's airports, both big and small. The
poll results on the country's best and worst airports will further
validate the need to upgrade these epicentres of India's booming
aviation industry," maintains CNN-IBN & IBN7 editor-in-chief
Rajdeep Sardesai.
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