"Swiss
authorities say the hijacker of an Ethiopian Airlines flight forced
to land at Geneva's international airport was the plane's co-pilot." Abc News
"An Ethiopian government spokesman told Reuters he believes the hijacker boarded the plane on a scheduled stop in Khartoum, Sudan's capital." VOA
The
airline says flight ET-702 from Addis Ababa to Rome was "forced
to proceed" to Geneva, where it landed early on Monday (local
time).
Airport
spokesman Bertrand Staempfli told reporters the co-pilot took control
of the plane when the pilot went to the toilet.
"He
said he felt threatened in his country and wants to seek asylum in
Switzerland," he said.
After
the plane landed the co-pilot left through the window on a rope and
surrendered to police.
Police
say the man was not armed, and there was no risk to crew or
passengers at any time.
State-run
Ethiopian television said there had been 193 passengers on board the
Boeing aircraft, including 140 Italian nationals.
The
brief drama caused the closure of the airport and cancellation of
some short-haul flights. Some incoming flights were diverted to other
airports.
Hundreds
of passengers booked on disrupted flights scrambled to change their
tickets.
A
flight tracking app for mobile devices showed the flight circling
over the Swiss city several times before landing.
Ethiopian
nationals and the Horn of Africa country's flag carrier have been
involved in several hijackings in the past.
In
1993, an Ethiopian used a gun hidden in his hat to hijack a German
passenger jet bound for New York. He was later sentenced to 20 years
in a US prison.
Two
years later, police in Greece overpowered an Ethiopian hijacker who
held a knife to the throat of an Olympic Airways stewardess and
demanded political asylum.
At
least 50 people were killed when a hijacked Ethiopian Airlines
passenger jet crashed in the Indian Ocean in 1996.
In
2001, a dozen Ethiopian students hijacked a plane carrying around 60
people and flew to Sudan.
No comments:
Post a Comment