Malta–Yugoslavia relations

Malta–Yugoslavia relations (Serbian: Односи Малта-Југославија; Croatian: Odnosi Malte i Jugoslavije; Slovene: Odnosi med Malto in Jugoslavijo; Macedonian: Односите Малта-Југославија) were historical foreign relations between Malta and now split-up Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

[3] Partisans left some of German weapons they took in fight which was subsequently exposed at the National War Museum at Fort Saint Elmo.

[3] Due to its commitment to Non-alignment Maltese diplomacy played more prominent role in Belgrade than the country's size or bilateral trade would imply.

This was perceived as an insistence on the universalist interpretation of the movement and as opposed to exclusively tri-continental proposals (Asia-Africa-Latin America).

[4] Future foreign minister Michael Frendo wrote his graduate thesis in 1977 on "Workers' self-management: A new concept of the legal structure of the enterprise in Malta and Yugoslavia".

Cold War division of Europe before the independence of Cyprus and Malta.
Maltese immigrants land in Sydney from the Yugoslav SS Partizanka, 1948