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The agreement, signed at the headquarters of Sharjah International Airport Authority, commits both parties to ensuring round-the-clock staffing readiness, improving the efficiency of passport control points, and adopting proactive measures to manage peak travel periods — all with a view to speeding up passenger processing and delivering a smoother, more comfortable travel experience.
The MoU was signed by Ali Salem Al Midfa, Chairman of Sharjah International Airport Authority, and Mohammed Ahmed Al Kuwaiti, Acting Director General of Ports at ICP. Sheikh Faisal bin Saud Al Qasimi, director of Sharjah International Airport Authority, was present at the signing ceremony.
One system, one goal
Speaking at the occasion, Ali Salem Al Midfa said the memo reflected a strategic partnership between two organisations that already operate as part of the same ecosystem—one in which roles and responsibilities complement rather than compete with each other. The agreement, he said, is built around a shared objective: smoother procedures, unified operational efforts, and integrated services that genuinely meet the expectations of today's traveller.
He added that partnership of this kind is central to the airport's readiness and to sustaining the standard of excellence it has set for itself. The MoU, he explained, introduces advanced benchmarks grounded in precise performance indicators, in line with the best international practices in airport management. He also reaffirmed the authority's ongoing commitment to developing a flexible operational environment — one that continuously improves service quality and cements Sharjah Airport's standing as a vital hub connecting regional and global destinations.
Raising the bar for the travelling public
Mohammed Ahmed Al Kuwaiti, for his part, spoke of the significance of the agreement in terms of quality standards and institutional governance across operations. He stated that the simplest indicator of success is satisfied passengers who depart content after a safe, seamless, and enjoyable journey. He placed the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) within a broader national framework, emphasising its endorsement of the UAE's leadership in travel and tourism, as well as its commitment to facilitating global freedom of movement.
Al Kuwait described Sharjah International Airport as a strategic asset and key player in the UAE's national travel network—and a recognised name in the wider regional and global aviation landscape. It is precisely this standing, he said, that makes the partnership between the two authorities not just worthwhile, but necessary.