of
Imperial Airways at Entebbe, 1936 The airport was opened by the British Colonial authorities. According to the website of the Uganda Civil Aviation Authority, due to the airport's location on
Lake Victoria and the existing facilities, the colonial government decided that the most optimal location for aviation traffic was Entebbe. On 10 November 1951, the airport was formally reopened after its facilities had been extended. Runway 12/30 was now , in preparation for services by the
de Havilland Comet. The new main terminal building of the airport was designed by
Yugoslav Montenegrin architect Aleksandar Keković and built by
Energoprojekt holding in 1972-1973 period. The airport was partially destroyed in April 1979 when it
was captured by Tanzanian forces during the
Uganda–Tanzania War. According to
ThePrint in November 2021, reports in African media suggest that China could take over the airport over the default of a loan, which was denied by China's foreign ministry and Government of Uganda.
Bloomberg News reported that the Ugandan government is seeking to amend a $200m loan agreement it signed with the
Export-Import Bank of China in 2015, to ensure it doesn't lose control of the airport, citing a report from the
Daily Monitor, an independent Ugandan daily newspaper. On 1 December 2021, the Attorney General of Uganda stated they had seen the story regarding the airport in media and that it was reportedly fake news. ==Modernization plans: 2015–2033==