Inta Airport ( Russian : Аэропорт Инта ) ( IATA : INA , ICAO : UUYI ) is an airport in Komi Republic , Russia located 2 km north of Inta . It services small transport aircraft.
4-561: On October 8, 2013, air traffic between Inta and the capital of the republic, Syktyvkar , was resumed. Flights are operated by Komiaviatrans airline twice a week (Tuesday, Saturday) on an L-410 aircraft . The airline also carries out passenger transportation from the airport to the villages of the Intinsky district ( Adzvavom , Kosyuvom , Petrun ) and the villages of the Nenets Autonomous Okrug ( Kharuta , Khorey-ver ). In 2022,
8-572: The Inta airfield was excluded from the register of Russian civil aviation airfields. This article about an airport in Russia is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Inta Inta ( Russian : Инта́ , Komi : Инта ) is a town in the Komi Republic , Russia . Population: 32,080 ( 2010 Census ) ; 41,217 ( 2002 Census ) ; 60,220 ( 1989 Soviet census ) . Inta
12-571: Was founded around 1940 as a settlement to support a geological expedition to explore coal deposits and projecting of mines. The city and a separate forced labor camp ( Intalag ) was built by deportees and political prisoners working in the coal mines of the Pechora coal basin . The city's name is in the Nenets language and means 'well-watered place.' During the Soviet era, a " corrective labor camp ", Intalag ,
16-433: Was located here. Within the framework of administrative divisions , it is, together with two urban-type settlements ( Verkhnyaya Inta and Kozhym ) and twenty rural localities, incorporated as the town of republic significance of Inta —an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts . As a municipal division , the town of republic significance of Inta is incorporated as Inta Urban Okrug . It
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