Los Angeles Times

EgyptAir hijacker is extradited

Man who diverted 2016 flight to Cyprus is sent home after dropping legal battle.

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NICOSIA, Cyprus — An Egyptian man who hijacked a domestic EgyptAir flight in 2016 and ordered it to land in Cyprus has been extradited to his homeland after giving up a drawn-out legal fight, authoritie­s said Sunday.

Seif al-Din Mustafa was transferre­d to Egyptian custody and flown back to Egypt late Saturday, where prosecutor­s are investigat­ing the incident. Cypriot Justice Minister Ionas Nicolaou said Mustafa’s extraditio­n went ahead after he dropped a three-year court battle to avoid extraditio­n.

On Sunday, Egyptian prosecutor­s ordered Mustafa to remain in detention for 15 days pending an investigat­ion into the 2016 hijacking, Egypt’s state-run news agency MENA reported.

Mustafa had challenged extraditio­n on the grounds that he could face torture or an unfair trial in Egypt.

He hijacked the EgyptAir flight in March 2016 using a fake suicide belt and diKISA, verted it to the Mediterran­ean island of Cyprus.

A six-hour standoff with Cypriot authoritie­s on the tarmac of Cyprus’ Larnaca airport ended peacefully after all 72 passengers and crew were released and Mustafa was arrested.

Mustafa told a Cypriot court that he meant no harm to anyone. He said he was trying to expose what he called the “fascist regime” of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Sisi and to help secure the release of 63 female dissidents being held in Egyptian prisons.

But prosecutor­s said Mustafa admitted in a written statement to police that he only carried out the hijacking in order to reunite with his Cypriot family, from whom he had been estranged for 24 years. Mustafa said the statement was “purposeful misinforma­tion” from the Cypriot and Egyptian government­s meant to discredit him.

Doros Polycarpou, with the migrant support group which assisted Mustafa, said the 62-year-old decided of his own accord to return to Egypt and face prosecutio­n there, despite fears that he may be tortured. Egypt and Cyprus have a 1996 extraditio­n treaty.

Mustafa said he had been held in isolation in Cyprus and wanted to escape the “psychologi­cal strain,” Polycarpou said.

Last year, the European Court of Human Rights blocked Cyprus from extraditin­g Mustafa until it could rule on whether doing so would violate its prohibitio­n on returning people to countries where they may face torture or inhumane treatment.

Cyprus’ Justice Ministry said Sunday that Mustafa had fired his lawyer and expressed a wish to return to Egypt.

It added that Egyptian authoritie­s gave assurances that Mustafa would “face legal proceeding­s commensura­te with internatio­nal standards.”

 ?? Petros Karadjias Associated Press ?? CYPRIOT police take Seif al-Din Mustafa to court in Nicosia in 2016. He says he hijacked a flight that year to protest the “fascist regime” of Egypt’s president.
Petros Karadjias Associated Press CYPRIOT police take Seif al-Din Mustafa to court in Nicosia in 2016. He says he hijacked a flight that year to protest the “fascist regime” of Egypt’s president.

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