Ndola
Ndola (Airport) | |
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Zambia's Ndola' airport in the Itawa suburb of the city officially became a civilian airport in the 1950s after first being used as a military base.
Ndola airport was renamed in 2011 in honour of Simon Kapwepwe, Zambia's former vice president. In late 2021, the Simon Mwansa Kapwepwe International Airport moved its operations to its current location adjacent to the Dag Hammarskjöld Crash Site Memorial from its previous location in Ndola's Itawa suburb.[1]
The new airport was engineered by the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC International) at a cost of $397 million.
The old airport in the Itawa suburb is no-longer a commercial airport and now belongs to the Zambian Air Force. On 30 July 2021, President Edgar Lungu gave the old airport location a name, Peter Zuze Air Force Base, named after Zambia's first indigenous air commander.[2]
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
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Document:Did SA spies bomb UN boss’ plane? | Article | 17 August 2015 | De Wet Potgieter | Susan Williams writes that in this set of documents – headed ‘Top Secret’ and ‘Your Eyes Only’ – Allen Dulles, the then director of the US Central Intelligence Agency, had promised full cooperation with Operation Celeste, which had also been agreed with British intelligence agency MI6. |
Document:The Mysterious Death of a UN Hero | Article | 16 September 2013 | Lisa Pease | Former President Harry S. Truman was convinced Hammarskjöld had been murdered. A Sept. 20, 1961 New York Times article quoted Truman as having told reporters, “Dag Hammarskjöld was on the point of getting something done when they killed him. Notice that I said ‘When they killed him.’” |
Document:UN to Probe Whether Iconic Secretary-General Was Assassinated | Article | 1 August 2016 | Colum Lynch | Susan Williams, who has studied SAIMR’s activities for years, said it would be a mistake to dismiss the papers’ authenticity out of hand. “I certainly would not discount the documents, which is why I went to so much trouble to find them,” she said. “Some of them may be what they are purported to be and some of them may not be what they are purported to be.” |