Even Zlatan Ibrahimovic, the Swedish footballer who has styled himself as the ”God of Manchester” after signing for Manchester United, was whisked for his medical with the Red Devils in one of Vista’s Malta-registered Bombardier aircraft.
VistaJet is far from alone in Maltese aviation. Some 28 companies and 220 aircraft are now on Malta’s aviation registry, set up six years ago following the success of the country’s maritime strategy.
Lufthansa operates one of its most efficient aircraft engineering centres in Malta; Britain’s royal family has hired Malta-based jets and VVB Aviation, an airline part-owned by a company of Iron Maiden lead singer Bruce Dickinson, is based there.
VistaJet, which registered its first jet in Malta in 2013, now has 55 planes worth a total of £1.8BN registered in the nation.
It has also recently moved its head office to Malta, adding 50 staff to the 225 it already had in the country. Four years ago, it had only 80 workers there.
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