RAF Luqa
RAF Luqa was an airbase of the
Royal Air Force on the island of
Malta during
World War II. Particularly from
1941 to
1943, RAF Luqa was a very important base for
British Commonwealth forces fighting against
Italy and
Germany for naval control of the
Mediterranean and for ground control of North
Africa. Air combat over and near Malta was some of the most ferocious of the war, and a series of airfields were built on the small, rocky island: at
Luqa, TaQali, and HalFar, plus satellite fields at Safi, Qrendi and on Malta's second island of
Gozo.
After the war, Luqa remained an important RAF base, but also served as Malta's main civilian
airport. Nowadays, the location has been developed into the main entry point of the modern, independent country of Malta, under the name
Malta International Airport. It is sometimes still referred to as "Luqa Airport" or "Valletta Airport".
The RAF left in 1979 following a British government decision not to renew the lease on the station from the Maltese. The payments demanded were several times the previous payments under the previous lease. It is also possible that the
Avro Vulcan crash over the village of
Żabbar led to the Maltese decision to effectively get the RAF to leave by raising the proposed lease payments to what was known to be a level unacceptable to the British.
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List of RAF stations*
List of air stations of the Royal Navy