Lodi News-Sentinel

Malta plane hijacking ends peacefully after two suspects surrender

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Hijackers who claimed to be armed with grenades took control of a domestic flight in Libya on Friday, threatenin­g to blow up the plane and forcing the pilot to land in Malta with 118 people aboard, officials said.

The passengers and crew were eventually released and the hijackers surrendere­d peacefully, Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said.

The two hijackers identified themselves as supporters of deposed Libyan strongman Moammar Kadafi, but it was not clear what their demands were, according to Magda Magri Naudi, mayor of the Maltese city of Lija.

She said the passengers included 83 men, 28 women and a baby. It was not clear what their nationalit­ies were, she said, or if any were injured. There were six crew members aboard, Muscat said.

As the ordeal progressed, Naudi said, 25 female passengers were let off the plane, and later, the rest of the passengers, who were believed to include a member of the Libyan parliament.

During a news conference in Valletta following the hostages’ release, Muscat said that when the hijackers agreed to surrender, they turned over their weapons, which included a hand grenade and a pistol. The two men, both Libyan nationals, were detained and interrogat­ed, he said.

He said a second pistol was found during a search of the plane. He said the plane’s passengers and crew were also being questioned.

Muscat said the hijackers were initially told that in order to maintain contact with negotiator­s, they had to release all passengers, which they did in stages. When the hijackers later demanded that two Maltese negotiator­s board the plane, authoritie­s refused, Muscat said.

The Airbus A320 aircraft operated by Afriqiyah Airways departed from Sebha on a domestic flight to Tripoli shortly after 10 a.m. local time but was diverted when the hijackers threatened the crew, according to Naudi.

“They told them, ‘We have grenades, and we will explode the airplane if you don’t do what we say,’” she said.

It wasn’t clear how the hijackers managed to get access to the cockpit, but Naudi said the crew never was forced to relinquish the plane’s controls, unlike in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

“The captain and the crew managed to land the aircraft themselves, and they did not hand it over to the hijackers, not like the hijackers so many years ago in America,” Naudi said.

The plane landed at the Malta airport at 11:30 a.m., where it was immediatel­y surrounded by security forces.

The tiny Mediterran­ean island nation’s airport was closed after the plane’s arrival, with all other flights diverted.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States