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Business Recorder, Pakistan, Oct 02(?),
2001
Red alert at airports sounded
as RAW's plot to hijack plane unearthed
QUETTA : Indian secret service, Research and Analysis Wing (RAW),
is said to have chalked out a plan to stage a calculated plane
hijack drama involving Pakistan to meet its clandestine ends.
"The sensitive security agencies of Pakistan have
intercepted a conversation among the RAW officers, revealing that
the RAW intends to hijack a plane of a big air line to bring it
to Pakistan in a bid to get Pakistan declared a terrorist
state," said the high placed sources here.
According to the sources, the government of Pakistan has sounded
a high alert at all the airports in the country to thwart such a
conspiracy by India.
The security has also been beefed up in view of the emerging
situation, and the aviation authorities have been directed not to
allow any such plane to land on the Pakistani soil.
It is pertinent to note here that soon after the September 11
terror attacks in New York and Washington, the Indian government
had offered its airspace and military bases to the United States
for any potential military action against the perpetrators and
harbourers of these attacks.
Similarly, the Indian authorities had also issued a fake
statement of the Jaish-e-Muhammad for its alleged claiming of the
Monday's suicidal car bomb attack in front of the State Assembly
in the occupied Kashmir to misguide the world opinion towards the
freedom struggle in occupied Kashmir.
It may recalled that the Jaish-e-Muhammad on Tuesday forcefully
refuted its involvement in the Monday's car blast in occupied
Srinagar, terming it a deep conspiracy by the Indian agencies to
malign the freedom struggle.-NNI
The News International, Thursday October 04, 2001
Indian plane hijacked
Boeing commandeered by 2 hijackers lands in New Delhi;
Pak airports alerted
NEW DELHI: A Boeing 737 belonging to India's state-run Alliance
Air was hijacked just after take-off from Bombay. The plane
landed in the Indian capital at around 1:00 am (1930 GMT
Wednesday), officials here said.
The plane, reportedly carrying 54 passengers and crew, was
surrounded by federal commandos at a "secluded area" of
the New Delhi's Indira Gandhi airport, officials said. Sources
said a two-member squad had hijacked the Boeing 737 and added the
attackers were males who "did not speak very well in
English."
Civil Aviation Minister Shahnawaz Hussain said the pilots of the
commandeered plane had asked for engineers but could not offer
more details. "We just got one message. The pilot did not
give any more details. Our contigency plans are in place,"
Civil Aviation Minister Shahnawaz Hussain said.
The minister added that all the passengers on board the aircraft
were "safe." The Alliance Air flight No. CD 7444, on
its way to Delhi, was hijacked after passing Ahmedabad, initial
reports said.
The Civil Aviation Ministry sources also said the pilots of the
Alliance Air plane, carrying a total of 46 passengers and an
eight-member crew, had locked themselves in the cockpit and were
refusing to open the door.
The Star News said all the passengers were unharmed but that they
remained aboard the jet, which was parked at an isolated area at
Indira Gandhi International Airport. The plane was surrounded by
police and commandos.
The authorities had opened a communications link with the
hijackers. Witnesses at the Indira Gandhi airport here said a
fuel truck had been parked near the aircraft. Aviation sources
said the tip-off about the hijacking had been made through an
anonymous phone call to the police. India, meanwhile, sounded a
nationwide alert at its civilian and military airports. Alliance
Air is a subsidiary of the Indian Airlines.
India's Civil Aviation Secretary A.H. Jang described the
hijackers as "menacing". "They are menacing.
Menacing enough for the pilots not to open the cockpit
doors," Jang said, adding the parked plane had been
"immobilised" by placing trucks in its path.
"We have established contact with the pilots. The cockpit is
safe. There are two people who speak little English. "We
have communication with the crew and they stated the hijackers
have something in their hands," the official told reporters
at New Delhi airport.
Jang said elite National Security Guard commandos ringing the
plane had several options -- ranging from "storming the
plane" to 'welcoming the hijackers" in case they
surrendered.-AFP
Meanwhile, Pakistan's Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) ordered an
alert at all airports across the country, with a high alert
ordered at Lahore airport, because of its proximity to New Delhi,
CAA officials said here, in the early hours of Thursday. All
precautionary measures have been taken with preparations made to
block runways at any moment, in case the hijacked Indian airliner
heads towards Pakistan.
Indian ploy to defame Pakistan: spokesman
By our correspondent
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan intelligence officials had intercepted some
Indian officials talk two days ago that India is planning to
stage hijacking and implicate Pakistan, a government spokesman
told The News early on Thursday. He said that the said report was
carried by some newspapers in Pakistan. He said hijacking is an
Indian government ploy to defame Pakistan.
Paknews.com, updated on 2001-10-04 16:14:49
Pakistan closes airspace in
fear of another Indian State Sponsored Hijack Drama
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Thursday immediately closed its airspace
except one approach. Incoming flights from abroad are being
diverted to the route from Karachi to Islamabad via Nawabshah,
Rahimyar Khan and Lahore. Any other plane which reaches
Pakistans airspace has been ordered to shot down.
On Oct 4th midnight Indian Secret Agencies hijacked an Indian
domestic flight and the government immediately blamed Pakistan
till the whole drama became an embarasement for Indian Govt.
India is busy trying to malign Pakistan with its cheap propaganda
and could go to any length. In the wake of this Hijack drama by
Indian Govt, Pakistan Aviation has closed its airspace.
In other developments, Pakistani intelligence Agencies have
already shared enormous amount of human intelligence with
American Military for an Air Strike on Afghanistan. Pakistan has
already agreed to provide its airspace to USA for any such attack
on Afghanistan. This could also be a step in clearing up the
skies over Pakistan for any possible attack on Afghanistan by
USA.
Paknews.com, updated on 2001-10-04 13:21:00
Indian plane hijack Drama
NEW DELHI: A Boeing 737 belonging to India's state-run Alliance
Air was reported to be hijacked for four hours at around 1:00 am
(1930 GMT Wednesday), just after take-off from Bombay. Later on
it was officially revealed that the whole news was based on some
confusion.
BBC remarked it as baseless news and blamed Indian Aviation for
creating such chaos and confusion for pilots and some fifty odd
passengers who went to a delima of extreme mental anxiety for
fours hours in the air.
Reportedly, pilots in the cockpit locked the doors thinking that
hijackers were in the passenger area, while the passengers
thought that hijackers were in the cockpit. Initially Indian
Interior ministry also made a press release about the hijack
plane, but later they said it was a confusion.
Indian officials are continuously trying to get world attention
with their malicious propaganda against Pakistan. Lately the
killing of more than 30 Civilians in the Indian Occupied Kashmir
was another staged massacre by the Indian Army. Amnesty
International is still asking India to let their staff
investigate the massacre of 35 Sikhs which were brutally done
during the visit of President Clinton to India. At the time of
massacre, India pointed all its fingers on Pakistan, but later
on, it became open to the world that the whole thing was designed
by Indian Intelligence Agency (RAW) to malign Pakistan. Amnesty
International till date is not allowed to visit Indian Occupied
Kashmir, where more than 70,000 Kashmiris have died in last 10
years. Kashmiris are demanding independence from Indian rule for
past 50 years. U.N. has passed a resolution in 1948 giving rights
to Kashmiris for self determination.
rediff.com, Oct 04 2001
Bizarre 'hijack' drama ends
peacefully
A bizarre four-hour 'hijack' involving an Alliance Air Boeing 737
with 52 people on board ended peacefully early on Thursday
morning, after an embarrassed government blamed 'false alarm' for
the comedy of errors that kept Prime Minister Atal Bihari
Vajpayee and the country's top security establishment on
tenterhooks during the night.
The flight that left Bombay at 11.15 pm on Wednesday night on its
way to Delhi was declared 'hijacked' over Ahmedabad and landed
shortly before 1 am amidst full security and emergency drill at
Delhi airport.
Three hours later, all passengers went home unharmed from the
'hijack' that never was.
As relatives of passengers on board rushed to the airport on
hearing the news from television networks that brought live the
coverage, the government's Crisis Management Group assembled
under the chairmanship of Home Minister Lal Kishenchand Advani at
2.15 am.
Woken up from their sleep, Civil Aviation Minister Shahnawaz
Hussain, National Security Advisor Brajesh Mishra, Foreign
Secretary Chokila Iyer as well as defence and home secretaries
and top intelligence bosses raced to the meeting.
In the end it was discovered that there had been a
miscommunication between the Air Traffic Controller at Ahmedabad
and the pilot of the flight CD 7444 of Alliance Air, a subsidiary
of Indian Airlines.
The Ahmedabad ATC had received an anonymous call that the flight
would be hijacked, which then informed Captain Ashwani Bahal that
the flight had been hijacked.
The pilot locked the cockpit believing that the hijackers were in
the passenger cabin.
He brought the plane to Delhi and parked it at an isolated bay
where it was surrounded by National Security Guard commandos, who
eventually deflated the aircraft tyre and stormed it after three
hours to find no hijackers.
Hussain stoutly denied persistent reports that the entire drama
was a mock exercise intended to test all systems in the event of
a real hijack.
He also said he had no information that NSG commandos had seized
two knife-wielding passengers, trying to scotch rumours to that
effect.
The 'hijack' kept Vajpayee awake till 4 in the morning, as he
monitored the situation with ministers and officials.
Hussain promised an enquiry into the entire episode, but drew
satisfaction from the fact that the system had been quickly
activated as in the case of an emergency.
Despite the minister's categorical statement, a variety of
rumours about the incident refused to die down.
Some passengers said it all began with a quarrel between two
passengers one of whom sought to enter the cockpit.
He reportedly said that he was a government official.
This triggered the hijack alarm, according to that version.
It was a truly a bizarre situation as journalists at the Delhi
airport and TV anchors calling passengers in the 'hijacked'
aircraft on mobile phones to find out how the situation was
inside only to be told everything was 'peaceful, calm and
comfortable'.
Most passengers spoken to did not know of the 'hijack', as they
had been told that they were being held because of a mechanical
defect.
Meanwhile, Civil Aviation Secretary A H Jung added to the
confusion when he said on television that there were two
hijackers who spoke 'a little English'.
He did not know how they had hijacked the plane except that 'they
have something in their hands, which was menacing enough to force
a hijack'.
The bizarre drama was brought to an end when Advani talked to the
pilot and the passengers were 'ordered' to be let off.
rediff.com, October 4, 2001 0355 IST
Passengers unaware of plane
being hijacked
Josy Joseph in New Delhi
Even as the crisis management group of the civil aviation
ministry is wrestling with the hijack of Alliance Air Flight
CD-7444, passengers on board the plane do not even know that the
plane has been hijacked.
A S Jain, a passenger on the plane who spoke to his brother at
Delhi airport on his cell phone, said the announcement on board
was that the plane had a technical fault and once it had been
rectified, the passengers would be allowed to disembark.
Jain said he had noticed nothing untoward on the flight and there
was no outward sign in the passenger area that the plane had been
hijacked.
In sharp contrast, Civil Aviation Secretary A H Jung had told
STAR News channel that the pilots had secured the cockpit and
locked themselves in, implying that the hijackers were outside,
in the passenger area.
rediff.com, October 4, 2001 1008 IST
Few takers for 'false alarm'
theory
With the Kandahar hijacking episode still fresh in their memory,
several passengers of the 'hijacked' Alliance Air flight
expressed anguish and disgust over government attributing the
incident to a 'false alarm'.
"This is not the way to test how the security apparatus
functions. If a real hijack takes place, what will happen,"
said an angry K Jain, a passenger of CD-7444 flight from Bombay
to Delhi, alighting from the aircraft after nearly a four-hour
captivity.
While some passengers felt that the entire exercise was 'mock', a
few others termed it as hundred per cent real 'hijack'.
"We were told by some commandos that we are safe now,"
said Darshan Singh, another passenger.
He added, "We were also conveyed that two of the hijackers
had been nabbed."
However, chaos and confusion reigned supreme at the Delhi's Palam
airport, which witnessed the four-hour long 'hijack' drama with a
few anxious relatives having a verbal duel with senior police
officials arguing about the black out of the news.
Even though Civil Aviation Minister Syed Shahnawaz Hussain said
that the entire episode was a 'false alarm', an Alliance Air
official, refusing to be identified, claimed, 'it was real hijack
and the elite National Security Gaurd Commandos entered the
aircraft through the landing gear into the cockpit and nabbed the
two hiajckers'.
Another passenger Anil Kumar Bhandari said, "We suspected
something was wrong as there was an abrupt halt to the aircraft
after it landed at the Delhi Airport."
Narrating the incident, he said, "The entire lights inside
the plane went off and we saw several vehicle with sirens atop
approaching the aircraft. However, we were not sure as to what
had happened."
Another passenger Anil Golcha, however, refused to believe that
it was a mock exercise.
"It did not look like a mock exercise. The way they
(commandos) beat up a passenger... was not a fake thing," he
said.
rediff.com, October 4, 2001 1620 IST
'Hijack was fishy', says MP
Chandrakant Khaire, Member of Parliament
I left my constituency, Aurangabad, in the morning and flew to
Mumbai for a meeting with party leaders. And I was scheduled to
leave for Delhi by the late evening flight.
When I boarded the flight, everything was normal. Around 12.50
am, the flight landed at Delhi airport, but was not moved from
the landing area.
After about ten minutes, I looked out of the plane window and
realised that the plane was not parked in the usual departure
area. I then checked with a crew member, who told me there was a
"technical snag".
I was not satisfied by the answer, since I could see that by
then, the plane had been surrounded by police and fire brigade
vehicles. Also, the runway lights had been turned off.
I, and a few other passengers, began asking the crew why the
aircraft doors were not being opened and finally, around 2.20 am,
they told us that there was a hijack problem.
Immediately, the atmosphere began to get tense. But fortunately,
not for long -- at around 2.30 am, the pilot announced that this
was merely an exercise to check anti-hijack preparedness.
I had meanwhile asked the crew for permission to use the mobile
phone, but I was told that to use the phone might disrupt
communications between the pilot and air traffic control.
However, I wanted to inform my family of the situation, so I made
a call anyway -- and that was when I learnt that TV news channels
were reporting that the plane had been hijacked and taken to
Lucknow, and that two hijackers were present on board the plane.
By then, every passenger was busy calling up relatives and
friends, reassuring them, exchanging information.
My wife and my mother called me up, and they updated me about
what the TV channels were saying. My wife also told me that lots
of friends and relatives had come rushing to our home, and that
everyone was very tense.
The crew, too, were looking tense, and depressed.
Around 3.05 am, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee called me on
the mobile, asked me for an update of the situation, and assured
me that he was personally looking into the situation. He told me
to calm the fellow passengers down, and to tell them not to
worry.
I in turn told him what I had learnt through conversations with
Alliance Air officials in Mumbai, whom I had contacted on the
phone. The airlines' director, Mukesh Bhatia,had told me that a
call had come to the plane from Air Traffic Control, Ahmedabad,
around 11.40 pm, saying that the flight was being hijacked to
Lucknow. Bhatia told me, further, that our pilot had operated the
hijack-alarm button, that is connected to all airports around the
country.
In fact, Bhatia was surprised to know I was on the plane, because
my name did not figure on the passenger list. It turned out that
they had misspelt my name, the entry read Khare/C instead of
Khaire/C.
As it turned out, what compounded the confusion was that by sheer
coincidence, shortly after the pilot got the call from ATC, a
passenger named Sharma wanted to get into the cockpit, and when
the crew attempted to stop him, the passenger got into an
argument.
The pilot, hearing raised voices outside, immediately locked the
cockpit door.
It was around 3.15, more or less, when the crew warned us that
unless we shut down our mobile phones, the hijackers on board
would shoot us.
The plane was shrouded in silence, and in gloom. As long as
people were in touch with their loved ones, things were okay, but
once the phones were switched off, the mood changed. All of us
believed that the hijackers were in the cockpit.
Around 4.15, the doors of the plane swung open and six men with
guns barged in. I later learnt that they were National Security
Guard commandos.
They rushed straight to seat number 12, where Sharma was sitting,
held a gun to his head, and told the rest of us to stay calm, and
disembark in orderly fashion.
I don't know what happened to Sharma, they probably detained him.
I alighted and went to the VIP lounge, where Special Commissioner
Security (Delhi Police) R S Gupta told me that the police smelt
something fishy in the incident, and added that he suspected
Sharma was not an ordinary passenger.
What surprised me about the entire incident was that despite all
this talk of putting sky marshalls on board all flights, there
was no one of the kind on this one.
All that I had seen and heard convinces me that there was some
conspiracy, some mischief at work. This was no mock exercise to
test anti-hijacking measures, though eventually that is the
colour that has been given to it.
I believe that if we have to prevent real tragedy some day, it is
important for us to conduct a proper inquiry into the entire
incident. It is vital to tighten security at airports and on
flights, and it is very important, too, to find out who made that
call from ATC Ahmedabad.
Shiv Sena Member of Parliament and former Maharashtra state
minister for housing Chandrakant Khaire was on board the Alliance
Air Mumbai-Delhi flight that was the centre of a false hijacking
alarm in the pre-dawn hours of Thursday.
Khaire narrated his first person account to Basharat Peer.
JDW.com
Panic in New Delhi as
terrorist fever creates hoax hijacking
By Rahul Bedi, New Delhi
The apparent hijacking last night of an Indian airliner flying
from Bombay to New Delhi, which led to four hours of panic and
confusion in India and around the world, was a false
alarm caused by an anonymous phone call to the aviation
authorities, officials said.
Indian Civil Aviation Minister Shahnawaz Hussian said the
"hijacking" of the late-night flight Boeing 737 flight
to Delhi was a "hoax". Security officials said it was a
security drill that went badly wrong as nobody in charge seemed
to know the reality.
"It was a cruel joke played on the 46 passengers, the
airline crew, the media and the world," said a security
official called into negotiate with the hijackers.
None of the senior officials seemed to know what was going on and
treated it like a real hijack, he added.
Even Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee was woken up around 1.00
am and told of the hijacking. Indias Cabinet Committee of
Security was also summoned at 4.00 am to deal with the crisis,
airports around the country were placed on high alert and the air
force was scrambled.
Many relatives who had come to receive the passengers broke down
when told of the hijacking. For them it evoked memories of an
earlier, successful hijacking in which some passengers were
killed. "What if anyone involved in this macabre joke had a
weak heart condition and suffered a stroke?" asked a furious
airline official, declining to be named. "Who would have
been responsible for such a catastrophe then?" he added.
Till 4.00 am millions of tense Indians were sombrely told by
Civil Aviation Secretary A Jung that Alliance Air flight CD 7444,
on a late night flight, had been taken over by two men around
midnight armed with "some weapons".
Police and National Security Guard commandos surrounded the
aircraft, which was diverted to a corner of the airport and a
fuel tanker positioned to it from leaving. Officials also said
the pilots had summoned two flight engineers and asked for flight
plans to fly to Lahore and Karachi in neighbouring Pakistan,
further exacerbating tension in the region.
A similar hijacking exercise to test the responses of
the security agencies over a year ago had resulted in similar
chaos, but an Indian Airlines Airbus hijacked to Afghanistan
nearly two years ago was allowed proceed unchecked.
Dawn, Oct 05, 2001
New Delhi's response to
'hijack' worries friends
By Jawed Naqvi
NEW DELHI, Oct 4: By revealing some nervous responses to a clutch
of horribly bloody as well as curiously imaginary terrorist
threats to the country in recent days, India appears to have
overstated its case as an oasis of calm and responsible demeanour
in New Delhi's quest to be accepted as an equal member of the
nuclear community, analysts and diplomats said on Thursday.
They said India's responses to recent devastating terrorist
attacks in Kashmir coupled with a farcical hijack drama on
Wednesday night, in which senior officials, including Home
Minister Lal Krishan Advani, were forced to hurtle into a crisis
management mode, were seen by the world at large with a degree of
worry.
"There could be a serious provocation anywhere in the world
tomorrow, as there was in New York last month," said one
diplomat. "Does that mean you threaten any country, even a
suspected country, with invasion? If so, you are in an obvious
minority, particularly if that country is nuclear tipped".
A mindless suicide attack in Srinagar killed more than 25 people
this week prompting calls by Jammu and Kashmri Chief Minister
Farooq Abdullah to declare war on Pakistan. In a more worrying
vein, India's junior foreign minister Omar Abdullah joined the
chorus to punish Islamabad with hot pursuit, almost following his
father.
Meanwhile, Pakistan President Gen Pervez Musharraf has condemned
the attack on the Srinagar legislative assembly. More worryingly,
on the issue of the misreported hijack Pakistan television
accused India of seeking to tarnish the image of Islamabad,
saying in a late night broadcast that New Delhi had already
accused Islamabad of commandeering the Alliance Airlines Boeing
plane on its flight from Mumbai to Delhi. Even Prime Minister
Atal Behari Vajpayee was so put off with the bad joke that he
ordered a high-level probe the "hijack" of, replacing
within hours another committee appointed by Civil Aviation
Minister Syed Shahnawaz Hussain.
One news report said the prime minister has expressed
"displeasure" over last night's episode that kept the
nation on tenterhooks for four hours. A blow by blow account of
the hijack by one newspaper would worry any country looking at
the response to an equal emergency by a nuclear state. That
response goes thus:
11.30 pm: Ahmedabad Air Traffic Control (ATC) receives an
anonymous call that flight CD 7444 would be hijacked and the ATC
informs the pilot Capt. Ashwin Bahal to lock the cockpit door and
that the "hijackers" were in the passengers' cabin. ATC
authorities at various airports, particularly in Lucknow and
Delhi, are alerted about the "hijack". Emergency
services get readied.
Oct 4, 12.52 am: The "hijacked" plane lands at Delhi.
Runway lights are switched off and directed by the ATC Delhi to
proceed to the isolation bay area.
1.15 am: News organizations come to know about the
"hijack".
1.21 am: Civil Aviation Minister Shahnawaz Hussain confirms that
the plane has been "hijacked".
1.45 am: TV channels go live for the coverage of the
"hijack".
1.50 am: Crisis Management Group consisting of senior secretaries
of the government and airline officials rush to the Rajiv Gandhi
Bhavan.
2.15 am: Civil Aviation Secretary A H Jung says there are two
hijackers on board who don't speak "good English". Jung
says the cockpit of the aircraft is sterile and
"hijackers" are in the passengers' cabin and that the
cockpit door is locked. Aircraft also immobilized.
2.20 am: L K Advani reaches the Rajiv Gandhi Bhavan and presides
over the Crisis Management Group meeting.
2.30 to 4 am: Confusion prevails. No official word but T.V
networks call passengers inside the "hijacked" aircraft
to ask about the situation. Many of the passengers say they are
not aware of hijacking but have been told there is a
"technical problem" with the aircraft.
4.00 am: Advani speaks to the pilot, Capt Bahal.
4.05 am: NSG commandos storm the cockpit of the aircraft and find
no "hijackers".
4.10 am: Shahnawaz Hussain says the "hijack" was a
false alarm and denies it was a "mock exercise".
4.12 am: Passengers disembark from aircraft.
The bizarre drama ends. The hijack of the Alliance Air Boeing 737
turns out to be a "false alarm".However, India's tough
cop K.P.S. Gill gave a different view to Dawn. "We have
messed up badly, I agree," he declared, "But it has
been a good, useful mock hijack exercise too."
The News International, Friday Oct 05, 2001
Indian plane hijacking ends as
farce, Vajpayee annoyed
NEW DELHI: The apparent hijack of a Boeing 737 of an Indian
airliner turned out to be a farce on Thursday, making Prime
Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee annoyed over the bizarre events
that led to a national security alert and senior ministers were
dragged from their beds for crisis talks.
"The prime minister has expressed displeasure at the last
night's incident," Civil Aviation Secretary AH Jung told
reporters, hours after India stood down an alert over the
supposed hijacking of a Bombay-New Delhi passenger flight.
Jung, a member of India's National Crisis Management Group, also
said Vajpayee has given stern instructions that no more such
incidents should occur. "He wants an inquiry why this has
happened and wants to make sure that in the future it should not
happen again," Jung said. The 76-year-old Vajpayee virtually
stayed up the night for the four-hour drama that ended when
commandos in New Delhi stormed the parked Alliance Air Boeing,
which was carrying 46 passengers and six crew members, but
realised there was no hijacking taking place.
Jung said the drama was triggered when state-run Indian Airlines
received a telephone call around midnight on Wednesday that the
Boeing would be seized in mid-flight. He said the alert
super-charged the atmosphere in the plane as well as in India's
aviation circles. Vajpayee was immediately put an alert about the
event and an emergency meeting was called by top government
ministers with Home Minister Lal Krishna Advani in attendance.
Jung said that after receiving the hijack warning, the Alliance
Air captain had asked his cabin crew to be on the lookout for any
suspicious movements among the passengers. It was at this stage
that one of the passengers got up to use the toilet. "One
passenger got up and started moving towards the front toilet and
when the crew requested him to use the rear toilet, he became
menacing and demanded to see the captain in the cockpit,"
Jung's ministry said in a statement. "When the request was
denied, he went back and repeatedly kept shuffling on his seat.
He was also constantly searching his handbag," it added.
The statement said the situation in the plane aroused the
suspicions and the crew contacted the Delhi air traffic control
saying there was indeed a hijacker on board. Thirty minutes later
the plane landed at Delhi, but it was some hours before the truth
dawned on everybody.
Civil Aviation Minister Shahnawaz Hussain was the first to
announce the so-called hijacking. One even went on television
saying that there were two hijackers "with something in
their hand" who "didn't seem to be speaking proper
English".
After landing safely at Delhi airport and taxing to an isolation
bay, the captain and co-pilot had sat tight in their cockpit for
nearly three hours, suspecting that hijackers were roaming around
the passenger cabin behind them. Many of the 46 passengers,
meanwhile, rode a roller-coaster of confusion and terror,
eventually convincing themselves that hijackers must be in the
cockpit. But the high drama ended in farce shortly before dawn:
there were no hijackers.
"First when we landed, we were given drinks, so we thought
it was not a hijack," said passenger Darshan Singh.
"After around two hours, we realised it was a hijack, then
we saw the commandos rushing to the aircraft, they told us don't
worry, you are safe."
The event has sparked off a debate over existing aviation
security arrangements in India. Jung said a probe has been
ordered into the incident, which to some brought back memories of
a 1988 mock hijacking staged by Indian commandos to hone up
skills against aviation terrorism.
rediff.com, October 4, 2001 1430 IST
'Hijack drama aimed at
discrediting Pak'
Pakistan on Thursday alleged that the "hijack" of an
Alliance Air flight from Bombay to Delhi was a "drama"
enacted by Indian intelligence agencies to discredit Islamabad.
Reporting on the incident, state-owned Pakistan Television said
the "drama" proved right an alert sounded by Pakistani
intelligence agencies on October 2 that India was chalking out a
plan to enact a hijack in order to project Islamabad in bad
light.
The television said intelligence reports circulated on October 2
by private news agency NNI and published in some of the
newspapers on Wednesday cautioned that Indian intelligence
agencies planned to hijack a plane and bring it to Pakistan to
get Islamabad declared a terrorist state.
The Pakistan government had also issued orders not to permit the
plane to enter the country's airspace in the event of an aircraft
being commandeered there, it said.
Official GOP Response , Thursday October 4, 7:53 PM
Pakistan ridicules India
hijacking "farce"
ISLAMABAD, Oct 4 (AFP) -
Pakistan heaped ridicule Thursday on rival India where commandos
stormed an airliner after what turned out to be a false alarm
that the plane had been hijacked.
"This was a total farce," foreign ministry spokesman
Riaz Mohammad Khan said, adding that the initial reporting of the
incident by the Indian broadcast media had sought to link
Pakistan and Kashmiri separatists with the supposed hijacking.
"We have noted and the world must have noted the enthusiasm
with which the Indian media tried to exploit this farce to malign
Pakistan and malign the Kashmiri freedom movement," Khan
said.
The Alliance Air plane, which was carrying 46 passengers and a
six-member crew on a Bombay to Delhi flight, was surrounded by
National Security Guard commandos on its arrival at New Delhi's
Indira Gandhi airport shortly after midnight Wednesday.
The commandos later stormed the plane, only to realise there were
no hijackers on board.
Indian Civil Aviation Minister Shahnawaz Hussain said the
"false alarm" was triggered by a call to air traffic
controllers.
Pakistan has been angered in recent days by India's efforts to
have the US-led war on terrorism expanded to cover what New Delhi
alleges is Pakistan's sponsorship of the long-running Muslim
insurgency in Kashmir.
"It has brought out the animosity and hostility we so
regularly experience on the part of the Indian media and many
Indian officials," Khan said.
Pakistan denies the charges that it funds and trains Muslim
militants operating in Indian Kashmir, but extends open moral and
diplomatic support to what it describes as the Kashmiris just
struggle for self-determination.
BBC, Thursday 04 October, 2001, 06:04 GMT 07:04 UK
India investigates false
hijacking
Police were on alert at Delhi's international airport
The Indian Government has launched an investigation into the
reported hijacking of a domestic flight, which turned out to be a
false alarm. The government said the episode was caused by an
anonymous phone call and confusion in the Alliance Air jet's
cabin and cockpit, insisting that it was not a government-planned
security drill.
Passengers could leave after the aircraft was stormed by
commandos
"This was not a drill. Until 10 minutes ago we thought it
was a hijack. It was only when the commandos entered the cockpit
that even the pilots realised that it was a false alarm,"
said Indian Civil Aviation Minister Shahnawaz Hussain.
But some passengers, including an MP from the governing
coalition, Chandrakant Kharge, said the pilots had announced the
hijacking "was an exercise".
Comedy of errors
The passengers were able to leave the aircraft at Delhi's
international airport early on Thursday, after commandos stormed
it.
The Boeing 737 of Alliance Air, a domestic subsidiary of Indian
Airlines, was on a flight from Bombay to Delhi when it was
reported seized by two hijackers.
Mr Hussain said the pilot was told about the phone call and
sealed his cockpit door. He then flew the plane to Delhi,
skipping the scheduled stop in Ahmadabad.
If this was an exercise, it should not have lasted more than
an hour. This has put the whole nation in a state of anxiety and
concern
Passenger Chandrakant Kharge, MP
What followed was a comedy of errors, in which
the pilots thought the hijackers were in the passenger cabin,
while air traffic control and the passengers thought the
hijackers were in the cockpit.
Other passengers were phoning their relatives from mobile phones,
saying they knew nothing about a hijacking.
Senior Indian cabinet ministers, meanwhile, had convened at the
airport for a crisis management meeting.
Police, commandos, ambulances and concerned relatives of
passengers converged on the airport.
Security scare
Mr Hussain said the plane was carrying 46 passengers and six
crew, revising earlier reports that there were 54 passengers on
board.
The plane was taken to an isolated area at Indira Gandhi
International Airport and surrounded by police and army after it
landed at 0100 on Thursday (1930 GMT Wednesday).
As a precaution, the aircraft's tyres were deflated and a fuel
tanker was parked in front of it so it could not take off.
During the crisis, intelligence officials were quoted as saying
there were two hijackers on board who "spoke broken
English".
It was also reported that these alleged hijackers had asked for
flight plans to various areas in northern India and to the cities
of Lahore and Karachi in Pakistan.
Pakistan reportedly closed all its airports in light of the
reports.
Mr Hussain said a statement with more information would be made
later on Thursday.
The world has been on a high security alert since the 11
September attacks in the US, when four planes in US domestic
flights were hijacked and flown into the World Trade Center's
twin towers, the Pentagon, and a field in Pennsylvania.
India, which has expressed support for US President George W
Bush's war on terrorism following the attacks, has been bracing
for a retaliatory attack.
Paknews.com, updated on 2001-10-07 12:22:35
Indian agencies aborted
hijacking drama on strong US advice: WKFM
ISLAMABAD, Oct 07 (PNS). Last minute ditching of Indian
Intelligence's hijack of Indian airliner was the result of US
strong advice to India not be too strident against Pakistan, Dr.
Ayub Thakur, President of World Kashmir Freedom Movement in a
statement said.
The well organised hijack of domestic airliner by the Indian
Intelligence was aimed at putting the blame on 'Pakistan
supported Kashmiri militants. Indian Intelligence, master
-minding the hijack attempt, must have been told by the Indian
government to abandon the attempt. Had it taken place, it surely
would have provoked Washington to further distance itself from
New Delhi.
Indian defence and foreign minister Jaswant Singh's attempt
during his recent visits to Washington and London in trying to
link the killing of 38 Kashmiris in front of State Assembly in
Srinagar with 'Pakistan supported militants' got no response.
While leaders in both the capitals condemned the killings, they,
however, refrained from blaming Pakistan for it, contrary to Mr.
Jaswant Singh and the Indian government expectations. Besides, US
President's declaration about a Palestine State has also scared
Indian government leaders that a similar fate perhaps awaits
Indian occupied Kashmir.
The entire hijack attempt was fraught with many ambiguities. It
was said that there were two hijackers who were speaking broken
English; they were armed with bombs; and among their destinations
was said to be Lahore in Pakistan, a hint that hijackers had some
connection with Pakistan.
Pakistan, as soon as the news of hijacking of the Indian airliner
was broadcast stopped the entry of all aircraft coming from
India. It may be mentioned that in 1971 Indian intelligence had
also organised hijacking of an Indian plane, 'Ganga" whose
passengers were mostly military personnel and which had landed in
Lahore and later destroyed by fire at the hands of the Indian
sponsored hijackers.
All the drama of his week's hijack in Indian was broadcast, over
TV news, including foreign networks. When questioned what was the
hijackers' demands, there was total silence from Indian
government leaders who had assembled at a remote corner of the
India Gandhi airport, along with military and paramilitary
personnel.
Realising the extreme pressure facing their government, the
Indian intelligence called off the hijack and it was announced
that the hijack was a false alarm. When the false alarm
announcement was not at all convincing, it was later claimed that
the hijack was part of and exercise of the Indian Intelligence.
India's
lies exposed