An airport of entry (AOE) is an
airport that provides customs and immigration services for incoming flights. These services allow the airport to serve as an initial port of entry for foreign visitors arriving in a country.
Terminology The word "international" in an airport's name usually means that it is an airport of entry, but many airports of entry do not use it. Airports of entry can range from large urban airports with heavy scheduled passenger service, like
John F. Kennedy International Airport, to small rural airports serving
general aviation exclusively. Often, smaller airports of entry are located near an existing port of entry such as a bridge or seaport. On the other hand, however, some "former" airports of entry chose to leave their name with the word "international" in it, even though they no longer serve international flights. One example is
Osaka International Airport. Even when it had ended all international services and became a purely domestic airport after the opening of
Kansai International Airport in 1994, it kept its original name of "Osaka International Airport". Many airports in the nearby region have the same situation, like
Taipei Songshan Airport. Songshan retained its official Chinese name, Taipei International Airport, after
Chiang Kai-shek International Airport (now
Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport) opened. Similar cases of transitions of international airports such as
Seoul,
Tokyo,
Nagoya,
Shanghai,
Hong Kong,
Bangkok,
Tehran, etc. For the
European Union, flights between countries in the
Schengen Area are considered domestic regarding passport and immigration check. Several international airports have only intra-Schengen flights. Several of these have occasional charter flights to foreign countries.
Stateless persons Some cases of
statelessness have occurred in airports of entry forcing people to
live in the airport for an extended period. One of the most famous cases was that of
Mehran Karimi Nasseri, an Iranian national who lived in the
Charles de Gaulle Airport in France for approximately eighteen years after being denied entry into France and not having a country of origin to be returned to due to claiming his Iranian nationality had been revoked. Nasseri's experience was loosely adapted by two films, the 1993 film
Tombés du ciel and the 2004 film
The Terminal.
Zahra Kamalfar, an Iranian national who attempted to travel to Canada via Russia and Germany using forged documents, lived in the
Sheremetyevo International Airport in Russia for eleven months before being granted refugee status by Canada to reunite with her family in Vancouver. ==In the United States==