• On 5 January 1960,
Vickers Viscount G-AMNY of
British European Airways was damaged beyond economic repair at Luqa when it departed the runway after landing following a loss of hydraulic pressure. • On 25 November 1973, Luqa Airport witnessed the landing of
KLM Flight 861. The aircraft, named "Mississippi", was a
Boeing 747 hijacked by three young Arabs over
Iraqi airspace on a scheduled
Amsterdam-
Tokyo flight with 247 passengers on board, after the hijackers threatened to blow up the plane when no country would grant landing permission. Most of the passengers and the eight stewardesses were released after negotiations with the Maltese
Prime Minister Dom Mintoff, who argued with the hijackers that the plane could not possibly take off with both the passengers and the 27,000 gallons of fuel they had demanded, given the (then) short runway. With 11 passengers on board the jumbo jet left Malta to
Dubai, where the incident ended without fatalities. The hijack was claimed by the Arab Nationalist Youth Organization. • On 23 November 1985, Luqa Airport was the scene of one of the deadliest aircraft
hijackings in aviation history before the
September 11 attacks.
EgyptAir Flight 648 was forced to land in Malta en route to
Libya.
Unit 777 of the
Egyptian
counter-terrorism forces was dispatched to deal with the incident. Storming of the
Boeing 737, reluctantly authorised by Maltese officials after five hostages were shot, resulted in the death of over 60 passengers plus several security personnel and aircrew as well as the hijackers, members of the
Abu Nidal Organization. •
Abdelbaset al-Megrahi was convicted for the 1988
Lockerbie bombing on the theory that he loaded a bomb onto Air Malta Flight KM180 Malta-
Frankfurt at Luqa Airport which it is alleged found its way via the interline baggage system onto
Pan Am Feeder Flight 103A Frankfurt-
London and eventually onto
Pan Am Flight 103 London-
New York. In August 2009, al-Megrahi was released from
Greenock Prison on compassionate grounds prior to returning to Tripoli, Libya for the final three years before his death in May 2012. • MLA was the origin airport of the
Air Malta Flight 830 Malta-
Istanbul hijack which ended at
Cologne Bonn Airport. • On 21 February 2011, two Libyan fighter pilots, both claiming to be colonels, defected and landed their
Mirage F1 jets at the airport after refusing to carry out orders to fire upon a group of civilian
Libyan protesters in
Tripoli. On the same day two
Eurocopter Super Puma helicopters registered in
France also landed carrying seven French nationals who were under Italian contracts to work in Libya. • On 24 October 2016, a
CAE Aviation Fairchild Merlin twin turboprop
crashed on take-off a short distance from the runway. All five people on board were killed. The aircraft was taking part in a French-led surveillance operation to counter people smuggling. • On 23 December 2016,
Afriqiyah Airways Flight 209, operated by an
Airbus A320-214, was hijacked while en route from
Sabha Airport to
Tripoli International Airport in Libya. The hijackers demanded the pilots to fly to Malta. ==References==