Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport

Main international airport of Serbia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport (Serbian: Аеродром Никола Тесла Београд / Aerodrom Nikola Tesla Beograd) or Belgrade Airport (Serbian: Аеродром Београд / Aerodrom Beograd) (IATA: BEG, ICAO: LYBE) is an international airport serving Belgrade, Serbia. It is the largest and the busiest airport in Serbia, situated 18 km (11 mi) west of downtown Belgrade near the suburb of Surčin, surrounded by fertile lowlands. It is operated by Vinci Airports (subsidiary of the French conglomerate Vinci) and is named after Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla (1856–1943).

Airport typeInternational
OperatorVINCI Airports Serbia d.o.o.[1]
ServesBelgrade
Quick facts Аеродром Никола Тесла БеоградAerodrom Nikola Tesla Beograd, Summary ...
Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport
Аеродром Никола Тесла Београд
Aerodrom Nikola Tesla Beograd
Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport in 2023
Summary
Airport typeInternational
OwnerGovernment of Serbia
OperatorVINCI Airports Serbia d.o.o.[1]
ServesBelgrade
LocationBelgrade, Serbia
Hub forAir Serbia
Operating base forWizz Air
Elevation AMSL336 ft / 102 m
Coordinates44°49′10″N 20°18′25″E
Websitebeg.aero
Map
Interactive map of Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
12L/30R 3,400 11,155 Asphalt/concrete
12R/30L 3,500 11,483 Asphalt/concrete
Statistics (2025)
Passengers8,911,987 Increase 6.5%
Aircraft movements89,480 Increase 3.9%
Cargo volumeN/A
Source: Vinci Airports Press Release[2]
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Native name
Аеродром Никола Тесла Београд
Aerodrom Nikola Tesla Beograd
Quick facts Native name, Romanized name ...
Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport
Native name
Аеродром Никола Тесла Београд
Aerodrom Nikola Tesla Beograd
Company type
Joint-stock company
BELEX: AERO
IndustryAirport operations
Founded28 April 1962; 64 years ago (1962-04-28)
HeadquartersAerodrom Beograd 47, Surčin, ,
Serbia[3]
Area served
Belgrade, Serbia
Key people
Saša Vlaisavljević (CEO)
Vesna Stanković Jevđević (Chairman of the Supervisory Board)
RevenueIncrease 5.96 million (2021)[4]
Positive decrease (2.15 million) (2021)[4]
Total assetsIncrease €275.18 million (2021) [4]
Total equityDecrease €244.00 million (2021) [4]
OwnerGovernment of Serbia (84.56%)
Others [4]
Number of employees
1,556 (2018)
ParentVinci Airports
Footnotes / references
Business ID: 07036540
Tax ID: 100000539
[5]
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The flag carrier and the largest airline of Serbia, Air Serbia, uses Belgrade Nikola Tesla as its hub. It is also one of the many operating bases for low-cost airline Wizz Air. The air taxi services Air Pink, Eagle Express and Prince Aviation also call the airport their home.

History

First airfields

The first airfield in Belgrade was inaugurated in 1910 in the neighbourhood of Banjica and was initially used by aviation pioneers such as Simon, Maslenikov, Vidmar and Čermak. Two years later a wooden hangar was built for the Serbian Air Force, which was at the time engaged in the First Balkan War against Turkey. In 1914, the Banjica airfield was the base for the Serbian Air Force squadron and the Balloon Company. After the end of the First World War, the Banjica airfield was used for airmail traffic and included the routes Novi Sad–Belgrade–NišSkopje and Belgrade–SarajevoMostar.[6]

In 1911 another airfield was inaugurated in Belgrade, in the lower city of the Kalemegdan Fortress at the location of today's Belgrade Planetarium.[6]

Airport in Pančevo

An airport on the outskirts of Pančevo, a town located northeast of Belgrade, began its operations in 1923 when CFRNA inaugurated the international route Paris–Istanbul, which was flown via Belgrade. In the same year, on that route, the first ever world night flight occurred.[7] The same year airmail service began operating from the airport. The Pančevo airport was also used by the Royal Yugoslav Air Force academy. After World War II, the airport was used by the Yugoslav Air Force before it became the airfield of the Utva Aviation Industry after its relocation from Zemun to Pančevo.[6]

Airport in Dojno Polje (New Belgrade)

Belgrade International Airport in the early 1930s

Because of the distance from Pančevo to downtown Belgrade, which at that time required crossing the Danube, a decision was made to build a new airport that would be closer. The airport was planned to be built just across the river Sava, in a neighborhood today known as Novi Beograd. It was opened on 25 March 1927 under the official name of Belgrade International Airport (also known as Dojno Polje Airport). From February 1928, the aircraft owned by the first local airline Aeroput started taking off from the new airport. The airport had four 1,100–2,900 metres (3,610–9,510 ft) long grass runways. The design for a reinforced concrete hangar that was built at the airfield was made by the Serbian scientist Milutin Milanković, better known for his theory of climate change. A modern terminal building was built in 1931, while the landing equipment for conditions of poor visibility was installed in 1936.[6]

Before World War II, Belgrade was also used as a stopover for some major air races, such as The Schlesinger African Air Race.[8]

Besides Aeroput, Air France, Deutsche Luft Hansa, KLM, Imperial Airways, LOT Polish Airlines and airlines from Italy, Austria, Hungary and Romania also used the airport until the outbreak of the Second World War. Belgrade gained further prominence when Imperial Airways introduced inter-continental routes through Belgrade, when London was linked with India through the airport.[9] Belgrade was linked with Paris and Breslau because CIDNA and Deutsche Luft Hansa, respectively, included Belgrade on its routes to Istanbul.[10] By 1931, Belgrade became a major air hub being linked with regular flights with international destinations such as London, Madrid, Venice, Brussels, Berlin, Cologne, Warsaw, Prague, Vienna, Graz, Klagenfurt, Budapest, Bucharest, Sofia, Varna, Thessaloniki, Athens, Istanbul, and also intercontinental links with Cairo, Karachi and India.[9]

Starting from April 1941, German occupation forces used the airport. During 1944 it was bombed by the Allies, and in October of the same year the German army destroyed the remaining facilities while withdrawing from the country.[6]

The airport was rebuilt by October 1944, and until the end of the war was used by the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia as part of the Allied war effort.[6]

Civil transport by Yugoslav Air Force cargo planes from this airport was reinstated at the end of 1945. At the beginning of 1947 JAT Yugoslav Airlines and JUSTA took over domestic and international traffic, and from 1948 Western European airlines resumed flights to Belgrade.[6]

A constant increase in traffic and the beginning of the passenger jet era called for a significant expansion of the airport. In the meantime, a plan to build a residential and business district called Novi Beograd on the location of the airport was introduced. The officials decided therefore that a new international airport should be built near the village of Surčin to the west. The last flight to depart from the old airport was early in 1964.[11]

Airport in Surčin

Belgrade Airport in 1968

The new location for the airport was on the Surčin plateau, 15 km (9.3 mi) from Belgrade's city centre.[11] Thanks to the original planners' vision, two conditions for the airport's development were fulfilled: a location was chosen that met the navigational, meteorological, construction, technical, and traffic requirements; and the special needs for the airport's long-term development were established.[citation needed]

Building of the new airport started in April 1958 and lasted until 28 April 1962, when it was officially opened by President Josip Broz Tito.[11] During that period a 3,000-metre-long (9,800 ft) runway was built, with the parallel taxiway and concrete aprons for sixteen airplanes. The passenger terminal building occupied an area of 8,000 m2 (86,000 sq ft). Cargo storage spaces were also built, as well as a technical block with the air-traffic control tower and other accompanying facilities. Modern navigational equipment was installed, earning the airport the highest international classification according to the International Civil Aviation Organization.[12]

The airport stagnated during the 1990s after the outbreak of the Yugoslav wars and the United Nations sanctions imposed on the Serbia and Montenegro. The sanctions also included a ban on air travel. The airport had minimal passenger movement, and many facilities were in need of reparation.

With a change in government and international sentiment, normal air traffic resumed in 2001. A few years later the airport's terminal 2 underwent a major reconstruction. The runway was upgraded to CAT IIIb in 2005, as part of a large renovation project. CAT IIIb is an Instrument Landing System (ILS), giving aircraft the security of landing during fog and storms. In 2006, the airport was renamed to Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport. Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor and scientist, generally considered one of the world's most famous inventors.[13] The construction of the new air traffic control centre was completed in 2010. In 2011 Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport shares (AERO) began trading on the Belgrade Stock Exchange (BELEX).

2012–2018

In 2012, construction work on the modernization and expansion of the airport began. It was carried out on the expansion and reconstruction of the A-gate and C-gate departure and transit areas. As a result, an extra 2,750 square metres (29,600 sq ft) was added. Jetways at the A and C gates were also replaced.

Also, there were plans for the construction of a new control tower as the current air control tower was built in 1962.[14] Future expansion of current terminals should see additional 17,000 m2 (180,000 sq ft) added, with terminal 2 obtaining an additional 4 jetways.[15]

2018–present

In January 2018, the Government of Serbia granted a 25-year concession of the Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport to the French airport operator Vinci Airports for a sum of 501 million euros.[16] On 21 December 2018, Vinci formally took over the airport.[17] In 2018, the airport had a sizeable increase in revenue and net income, due to Vinci Airports transaction.[18] On 24 April 2024, Serbian finance minister Siniša Mali announced that the concession of Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport had been extended by 18 months[19] in order to minimize the influence of COVID-19 Pandemic. The concession is to last until 1 July 2044.

Terminals

Terminal exterior
Air traffic control tower

The airport's two terminals have a combined area of 93,651 square metres (1,008,050 sq ft), with Terminal 2 being larger of the two, the two terminals are connected by a hallway.[20] The airport has 90[21] check-in counters and 32[22] gates (of which 24 are equipped with jetways). Gates A1-A10 and C1-C14 are equipped with jetways, gates A7a, A7b and C10a-C10e use buses, while gate A11 is used for domestic flights to Niš.

Terminal 1

Terminal 1 (T1) was the original and only terminal when the airport was built. The terminal handled domestic flights during the time of Yugoslavia and Serbia and Montenegro, and subsequently has come to be used for international flights, mostly by low-cost and charter airlines. The terminal went through a major renovation in 2016 and 2017 when the interior was overhauled.[23]

Terminal 2

Terminal 2 (T2) was constructed in 1979 for the airport's growing passenger numbers. The terminal has a capacity of 5 million passengers.[24] The terminal contains airline offices, transfer desks and various retail shops. The terminal went through two major renovations: from 2004 through 2006, with the arrivals and departures areas of the terminal completely reconstructed, and another one in 2012 and 2013 when there were works on expansion and overhaul of the C platform. While not officially confirmed, it is believed that the overhauled T1 will be used by foreign carriers, while Air Serbia and Etihad Airways Partners would gain exclusive use of Terminal 2.[25]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights as of March 2026:[26][better source needed]

More information Airlines, Destinations ...
AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens[27]
airBaltic Riga[28]
Air Cairo Hurghada[29][30]
Air Montenegro Podgorica, Tivat
Air Serbia Alicante (begins 1 June 2026),[31] Amsterdam,[32] Athens,[32] Baku,[33] Banja Luka,[34] Barcelona,[35] Bari,[36] Berlin,[37] Bologna,[38] Brussels,[35] Bucharest–Otopeni,[32] Budapest,[32] Chicago–O'Hare,[39] Copenhagen,[38] Düsseldorf,[35] Frankfurt,[35] Florence,[40] Geneva,[41] Guangzhou,[42] Hamburg,[43] Hannover,[43] Istanbul,[35] Kazan,[44] Kraków,[38] Larnaca,[32] Lisbon,[38] Ljubljana,[35] London–Heathrow,[32] Madrid,[35] Málaga,[45] Malta,[32] Milan–Malpensa,[35] Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Mostar,[46] Munich (resumes 22 May 2026),[47] Naples,[43] New York–JFK,[48] Nice,[49] Niš,[50] Nizhny Novgorod (begins 19 May 2026),[51] Nuremberg, Oslo,[35] Paris–Charles de Gaulle,[32] Podgorica,[52] Prague,[32] Rome–Fiumicino,[35] Saint Petersburg, Salzburg,[35] Sarajevo,[52] Seville (begins 30 September 2026),[33] Shanghai–Pudong,[53] Skopje,[52] Sochi,[44] Sofia,[32] Split,[54] Stockholm–Arlanda,[55] Stuttgart,[35] Tbilisi,[56] Tenerife–South (begins 15 September 2026),[57] Thessaloniki,[35] Tirana,[52] Tivat,[35] Tromsø (begins 14 December 2026),[33] Valencia,[58] Venice,[35] Vienna,[32] Zagreb,[35] Zürich[59]
Seasonal: Alghero,[40] Brač (begins 20 June 2026),[60] Catania,[38] Chania,[35] Corfu,[35] Dubrovnik,[35] Gothenburg,[43] Heraklion,[38] Izmir,[61] Mykonos,[40] Ohrid,[38] Palermo,[38] Palma de Mallorca,[62] Porto,[63] Pula,[38] Rhodes,[32] Rijeka,[38] Santorini,[33] Toronto–Pearson (resumes 23 May 2026),[64] Varna,[38] Zadar[38]
Seasonal charter: Antalya,[65] Bodrum,[65] Dalaman,[65] El Dabaa,[65] Hurghada,[65] Kavala,[65][66] Kefalonia,[65] Marsa Matruh,[65][67] Monastir,[65] Preveza/Lefkada,[65] Sharm El Sheikh,[65] Skiathos,[65] Zakynthos[65]
AJet Ankara,[68] Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen,[69] Izmir[70]
Arkia Tel Aviv[71]
Austrian Airlines Vienna[72]
China Southern Airlines Guangzhou[73]
easyJet Geneva,[74] Paris–Charles de Gaulle[75]
Eurowings Seasonal: Cologne (begins 17 July 2026) [76]
flydubai Dubai–International[77]
Hainan Airlines Beijing–Capital
KLM Amsterdam[78]
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin[79]
Lufthansa Frankfurt,[80] Munich[80]
Norwegian Air Shuttle Oslo[81]
Nouvelair Seasonal charter: Djerba,[82] Monastir[82]
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen[83]
Qatar Airways Doha (suspended until 15 June 2026)[84]
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia (resumes 19 September 2026)[85]
SCAT Airlines Astana[86]
Sky Express Seasonal charter: Heraklion,[87] Rhodes[88]
Sundor Tel Aviv[89][90]
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich[91]
TAROM Bucharest–Otopeni[92]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul[83]
Wizz Air Alicante,[93] Barcelona,[94] Basel/Mulhouse,[94] Beauvais,[94] Bergamo,[94][95] Berlin,[94][95] Dortmund,[94] Eindhoven,[94] Friedrichshafen,[93] Gothenburg,[94] Hamburg,[94] Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden,[94] Larnaca,[94] London–Luton,[94] Madrid,[96] Malmö,[94] Malta,[94] Memmingen,[94][97] Nice,[94] Rome–Fiumicino,[94] Stockholm–Skavsta[94][98]
Seasonal: Alghero,[99] Chania (begins 8 June 2026),[100] Grenoble,[101] Palermo,[102] Pisa (begins 9 June 2026)[100]
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Belgrade Airport passenger destinations

Cargo

The following cargo airlines served the airport on a regular basis:[103][better source needed]

Statistics

Traffic figures

More information Year, Passengers ...
Year Passengers Change Cargo (t) Change Aircraft movements Change
2002 1,621,798 Steady 6,827 Steady 28,872 Steady
2003 1,849,148 Increase14% 6,532 Decrease4% 32,484 Increase13%
2004 2,045,282 Increase11% 8,946 Increase37% 36,416 Increase12%
2005 2,032,357 Decrease1% 7,728 Decrease14% 37,614 Increase3%
2006 2,222,445 Increase9% 8,200 Increase6% 42,360 Increase13%
2007 2,512,890 Increase13% 7,926 Decrease3% 43,448 Increase3%
2008[105] 2,650,048 Increase5% 8,129 Increase3% 44,454 Increase2%
2009[106] 2,384,077 Decrease10% 6,690 Decrease18% 40,664 Decrease8%
2010[107] 2,698,730 Increase13% 7,427 Increase11% 44,160 Increase9%
2011[108] 3,124,633 Increase16% 8,025 Increase8% 44,923 Increase2%
2012[109] 3,363,919 Increase8% 7,253 Decrease10% 44,990 Increase0%
2013[110] 3,543,194 Increase5% 7,679 Increase6% 46,828 Increase4%
2014[111] 4,638,577 Increase31% 10,222 Increase33% 58,695 Increase25%
2015[112] 4,776,110 Increase3% 13,091 Increase28% 58,506 Increase0%
2016[113] 4,924,992 Increase3% 13,939 Increase7% 58,633 Increase0%
2017[114] 5,343,420 Increase9% 22,350 Increase42% 58,859 Increase0%
2018[115] 5,641,105 Increase6% 25,543 Increase29,3% 67,460 Increase3,8%
2019 [116] 6,159,000 Increase9.2% N/A N/A 70,365 Increase4,3%
2020[117] 1,904,025 Decrease69.1% N/A N/A 34,452 Decrease51.2%
2021[118] 3,286,295 Increase73% N/A N/A 48,842 Increase45%
2022[119] 5,611,920 Increase71% N/A N/A 65,644 Increase34%
2023 [120] 7,948,202 Increase 41.5% N/A N/A N/A N/A
2024 [121] 8,367,931 Increase 5.3% N/A N/A 86,121 Increase 3.4%
2025 [122] 8,912,349 Increase 6.5% N/A N/A 89,480 Increase 3.9%
2026 (1.1.-31.3.)[123] 1,755,728 Increase 8.8% N/A N/A N/A N/A
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Passenger numbers

More information Month, Passengers ...
2025[124]
Month Passengers Change (2024–2025) Passengers Cumulatively
January 563,693 Decrease 1.3% 563,693
February 495,532 Increase 3.2% 1,059,225
March 556,281 Decrease 0.4% 1,615,506
April 682,266 Increase 10.8% 2,297,772
May 751,591 Increase 4.8% 3,049,363
June 868,030 Increase 11.8% 3,917,393
July 974,091 Increase 6.6% 4,891,484
August 1,003,934 Increase 7.5% 5,895,418
September 905,016 Increase 5.5% 6,800,434
October 812,129 Increase 8.0% 7,612,563
November 651,260 Increase 9.4% 8,263,823
December 648,526 Increase 8.6% 8,912,349
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More information Month, Passengers ...
2026[125]
Month Passengers Change (2025–2026) Passengers Cumulatively
January 600,348 Increase 6.5% 600,348
February 543,471 Increase 9.4% 1,143,819
March 611,909 Increase 10.0% 1,755,728
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
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Busiest routes

More information Rank, Airport ...
Top 10 busiest routes from Belgrade in 2024[128]
Rank Airport Passengers Airlines
1 Turkey Istanbul 472,280 Air Serbia, Turkish Airlines
2 Switzerland Zurich 453,508 Air Serbia, Swiss International Air Lines
3 Montenegro Podgorica 326,265 Air Montenegro, Air Serbia
4 Germany Frankfurt 324,771 Air Serbia, Lufthansa
5 Montenegro Tivat 316,662 Air Montenegro, Air Serbia
6 Russia Moscow–Sheremetyevo 266,464 Air Serbia
7 Austria Vienna 252,809 Air Serbia, Austrian Airlines
8 Netherlands Amsterdam 230,092 Air Serbia, KLM
9 Spain Barcelona 200,850 Air Serbia, Wizz Air
10 France Paris–Charles de Gaulle 193,500 Air Serbia
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More information Rank, Destination ...
Highest number of passengers by country in 2024[129]
Rank Destination Number of passengers
1 Germany Germany 1,015,137
2 Turkey Turkey 813,600
3 Montenegro Montenegro 642,927
4 Switzerland Switzerland 593,816
5 Russia Russia 344,700
6 Italy Italy 337,969
7 France France 327,909
8 Netherlands Netherlands 310,921
9 United Arab Emirates UAE 265,382
10 United Kingdom United Kingdom 258,105
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Services

Security

Before the 2020/2021–2023 remodelling, Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport was built with only one airside hallway for both departing and arriving passengers. As such, security checks used to be located at gate entrances rather than on a central location. An additional security check used to exist on the hallway entrance, but it was removed in 2013 as it inconvenienced passengers and was not essential for security.[130] Since 2021, however, there has been a central security hall directly above the ticketing area, before passport control, where all passengers must be screened.

Passport control for departing passengers is located on the first floor in Terminal 2, just before the security screening, while the passport control for arriving passengers is located on the ground level. All passengers must pass the passport control, except those traveling domestically. An additional passport control booth exists in Terminal 1; however, it is no longer available for passengers, only for flight crews. In mid-December 2024 eGates for passport controls were introduced, with 10 eGates in the departures area and 10 eGates in the arrivals area, totalling in 20 eGates.[131]

In 2007 the airport prohibited cars parking next to the airport terminal, instead they have to use the car park provided, as a result of the 2007 Glasgow Airport attack.[132]

Lounges

Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport offers a business class lounge operated by Dufry, "Business Club", for the majority of airlines operating from the airport. "Business Club", opened in 2011, covers an area of 250 m2 (2,700 sq ft), and can seat 30 guests.[133]

The airport also has a VIP Lounge, with separate check-in and passport control facilities. The VIP Lounge is entered from the public area and directly from the apron, so it functions as a separate and independent element. Passport and customs control and baggage control are located at the very entrance into the lounge.

Air Serbia Premium Lounge is the first dedicated airline-owned and -operated lounge at the airport, located between gates A4 and A5. Air Serbia plans to open a new Premium Lounge next to gate C10 at Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport by the end of 2024. The new lounge will occupy an area of 630 m2 (6,800 sq ft) (twice the size of the existing lounge) and will be able to accommodate up to 160 guests simultaneously.[134]

Ground transport

Car

The airport is connected to the A3 motorway via a nearby interchange. The toll station on A3 is located to the west of the interchange, and the sections to the Belgrade downtown and the Belgrade bypass are toll-free. Licensed taxis from the airport to the city are available.

Bus

The following scheduled bus services connect the airport with its surroundings:[135][136]

More information Service, Destination (departing from the airport) ...
ServiceDestination (departing from the airport)
Line A1Slavija Square
Line 72Zeleni Venac
Line 72N (night line) Republic Square
Line 600Belgrade Centre railway station
Line 607Banovo Brdo
Line 860iBelgrade Bus Station / Barič
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Rail

The Serbian Ministry of Construction, Transportation and Infrastructure has announced a construction project for a new railway line between the city and the airport. The construction is scheduled to start in 2024, and should be completed in 18 months.[137]

Accidents and incidents

  • On 18 February 2024, Air Serbia Flight 324, an Embraer E-195 wet-leased from Marathon Airlines with 106 passengers and crew on board, sustained serious damage to its fuselage and tail after hitting the airport runway's instrument landing system array during takeoff on its way to Düsseldorf. The aircraft turned back after failing to gain altitude and was safely evacuated upon landing.[138]

See also

References

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