Difference between revisions of "Hijacking" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Law]]
 
[[Category:Law]]
  
{{Citations missing|date=December 2006}}
 
  
'''Aircraft hijacking''' (also known as '''skyjacking''' and '''aircraft piracy''') is the take-over of an [[aircraft]], by a person or group, usually armed. In most cases the pilot is forced to fly according to the orders of the hijackers.
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'''Hijacking''' is the assumption of control of a vehicle through some means of coercion, often the threat of violence. The two most prevalent forms of hijacking are of [[aircraft]] and [[automobile]]s. The [[motivation]]s of these [[crime]]s differ greatly based on what is being hijacked, with the hijacking of planes often being [[politics|politically]] motivated, while carjackers are usually financially motivated. '''Aircraft hijacking''' (also known as '''skyjacking''' and '''aircraft piracy''') is the take-over of an aircraft, by a person or group, usually armed. The first recorded incident was in March 1912, and since then, there have been many larger, more destructive hijackings, including the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]] which led to the death of over 3,000 innocent people.  
 
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Alternatively one of the hijackers flies the plane himself. The latter was the case in the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]]; hijackers took flying lessons as preparation, or were selected by [[Al-Qaeda]] based partly on flying skills.
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While [[law enforcement]] and international efforts have been made to increase security and reduce such threats, the ultimate solution to the problem of hijacking is to resolve the issues that drive the perpetrators to commit these crimes. Perpetrators who are willing to sacrifice their own lives in [[suicide]] missions will not be deterred by the threat of any kind of [[punishment]], nor will they cease because of security measures taken in response to previously carried out actions. The solution to hijacking is not specific to the act but to the underlying problems of human [[suffering]].
 
 
In one case the official pilot hijacked the plane: in October, 1998, on an [[Air China]] flight from [[Beijing]] to [[Kunming]] in [[Yunnan]], he flew to [[Taiwan]] after threatening to crash the plane killing the passengers if the other members of the crew prevented him from flying to Taiwan.<ref>{{cite news | title = Air China pilot hijacks his own jet to Taiwan | publisher = [[CNN]] | date = 1998-10-28 | url = http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/asiapcf/9810/28/hijack.china.taiwan.02/index.html | accessdate = 2007-01-25 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | author = B. Raman | title = PLANE HIJACKING: IN PERSPECTIVE | publisher = [[South Asia Analysis Group]] | date = 2000-01-02 | url = http://www.saag.org/papers2/paper103.html | accessdate = 2007-01-25 }}</ref>
 
 
 
Unlike the hijacking of land vehicles or ships, skyjacking is usually not perpetrated in order to rob the cargo. Rather, most aircraft hijackings are committed to use the passengers as [[hostage]]s in an effort to obtain transportation to a given location, to hold them for [[ransom]], or, as in the case of the [[United States|American]] planes that were [[List of Cuba-US aircraft hijackings|hijacked to Cuba]] during the 1960s and 70s, the release of comrades being held in prison. Another common motive is [[publicity]] for some cause or grievance. Since the use of hijacked planes as suicide missiles in  [[September 11, 2001 attacks]], hijacking is a different kind of security threat &mdash; though similar usages had apparently been attempted by [[Samuel Byck]] in 1974 and on [[Air France Flight 8969]] in 1994.
 
 
 
Hijackings for hostages have usually followed a pattern of negotiations between the hijackers and the authorities, followed by some form of settlement — not always the meeting of the hijackers' original demands — or the storming of the aircraft by armed police or special forces to rescue the hostages.  Prior to September, 2001, the policy of most airlines was for the pilot to comply with hijackers' demands in the hope of a peaceful outcome.  Since then, policies have reversed course, in favor of arming and armoring the cockpit.
 
 
 
Options for preventing hijacking include screening to keep weapons off the airplane, putting [[Federal Air Marshal Service|air marshals]] on the flight, and fortifying the cockpit to keep hijackers out.
 
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==
The first recorded aircraft hijack was on February 21, 1931, in [[Arequipa]], [[Peru]]. [[Byron Rickards]] flying a [[Ford Tri-Motor]] was approached on the ground by armed revolutionaries. He refused to fly them anywhere and after a ten day stand-off Rickards was informed that the revolution was successful and he could go in return for giving one of their number a lift to [[Lima]]. Most hijackings have not been so farcical. The first hijack of a commercial airliner probably happened on July 16, 1948, when a failed attempt to gain control of the [[Miss Macao]], a seaplane of a [[Cathay Pacific]] subsidiary company, caused it to crash into the sea off [[Macau]]. On June 30 1948, a [[Bulgaria]]n commercial [[Junkers (Aircraft)|Junkers]] plane was successfully hijacked to [[Istanbul]] by a discharged diplomat and his family, who had to shoot dead the co-pilot (who happened to be the head of Bulgaria's civil aviation) and the radio operator in order to escape to the [[Western world|West]]. 
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{{readout|The term '''hijacking''' arose in connection with the seizing of liquor trucks  during [[Prohibition in the United States]].|left}}<ref>Roy Olmstead, [http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=4015 Historylink.] Retrieved June 14, 2007.</ref> This usage in reference to commandeering vessels laden with valuable goods remains prevalent.
On September 12 1948 a [[Greece|Greek]] [[Olympic Airways|T.A.E Airlines]] plane was successfully hijacked by 6 pro-communist students who wanted passage to [[Yugoslavia]]. The plane landed near [[Skopje]] and returned to [[Thessaloniki]] later that evening.
 
 
 
The first state-hijacking of an airplane is [[Israel]]'s hijacking of a [[Syrian]] airways civilian jet in 1954, with the intent "to get hostages in order to obtain the release of our prisoners in Damascus," who had been captured spying in [[Syria]] ([[Prime Minister]] [[Moshe Sharett]]). Sharett accepted the "factual affirmation of the [[US State Department]] that our action was without precedent in the history of international practice."
 
 
 
Since 1947, 60% of hijackings have been refugee escapes. In 1968-69 there was a massive rise in the number of hijackings. In 1968 there were 27 hijackings and attempted hijackings to Cuba. In 1969 there were 82 recorded hijack attempts worldwide, more than twice the total attempts for the whole period 1947-67. Some were [[Palestinian]]s using hijacks as a political weapon to publicise their cause and to force the Israeli government to release Palestinian prisoners from jail.
 
 
 
Airliner hijackings have declined since the peak of 385 incidents between 1967-76. In 1977-86 the total had dropped to 300 incidents and in 1987-96 this figure was reduced to 212.
 
 
 
== List of well-known hijackings ==
 
{{Cleanup|date=April 2007}}
 
*Hungary 1956, July 13: A [[Malév]] Flight 387 [[Li-2]] plane was hijacked by group of 7 Hungarian anti-communists. Some passengers were seriously wounded. The plane is landed on the [[Ingolstadt]] NATO-airfield. 2 passengers and hijackers are emigrated to [[Germany]], others returned to Hungary at [[17th July]]. 
 
*Cuba 1958, November 1: First [[List of Cuba-US aircraft hijackings|Cuba-to-U.S. hijacking]]. A Cubana en route from Miami to [[Varadero]] to Havana was hijacked by Cuban militants.  The hijackers were trying to land at Sierra Cristal in Eastern Cuba to deliver weapons to [[Raúl Castro]]'s rebels.  As night approached, eventually the plane ran out of fuel and tried an emergency landing at the Preston sugar mill, it did not make it and instead landed in the ocean breaking apart killing most passengers and crew.<ref> [http://www.planecrashinfo.com/1958/1958-41.htm Accident details] planecrashinfo.com </ref>
 
 
 
*Palestine 1968: The first Arab-Israeli hijacking, as three members of [[Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine]] (PFLP) hijack an [[El Al]] plane to [[Rome]]. Diverting to [[Algiers]] the negotiations extend over forty days. Both the hijackers and the hostages go free. This was the first and the only successful hijacking of an El Al flight.
 
 
 
*Soviet Union 1970 May 15: [[Dymshits-Kuznetsov hijacking affair]], a group of Soviet [[refusenik]]s attempt to hijack aircraft
 
 
 
*Palestine 1970, September: As part of the [[Dawson's Field hijackings]], PFLP members attempt to hijack four aircraft simultaneously. They succeed on three and force the planes to fly to the [[Jordan]]ian desert, where the hijackers blow up the aircraft after releasing most of the hostages. The final hostages are freed in exchange for seven Palestinian prisoners.  The fourth attack on an [[El Al]] plane by two people including [[Leila Khalid]] is foiled by armed guards aboard.
 
 
 
*USA 1971: [[D. B. Cooper]] hijacks [[Northwest Orient Airlines flight 305]] and obtains $200,000 ransom for the release of the plane's passengers.  Cooper proceeds to [[parachute]] from the rear of the [[Boeing 727]] and is never found.
 
 
 
*Australia 1972 November 15: First airline hijacking in Australia. A lone hijacker armed with a .22 sawn-off rifle and a knife in flight on [[Ansett]] Airlines flight 232 from [[Adelaide]] to [[Alice Springs, Northern Territory|Alice Springs]] with 28 passengers and a crew of 4. Followed by gun battle at [[Alice Springs Airport]] resulting in the death of the hijacker [[Miloslav Hrabinec]] and a police officer critically wounded.
 
 
 
*USA 1974 February 22: [[Samuel Byck]] shot and killed [[Maryland Aviation Administration]] Police Officer Neal Ramsburg at BWI before storming aboard [[Delta Air Lines]] flight 523 to Atlanta. He gained access to the cockpit while the plane was on the ground, intending to assassinate [[President Nixon]] by flying the [[McDonnell Douglas DC-9|DC-9]] into the [[White House]]. He shot both the pilot and the copilot before he was shot through the aircraft window by another officer.
 
 
 
*Palestine 1976: The Palestinian hijack of [[Air France]] [[Air France Flight 139|Flight 139]] is brought to an end at [[Entebbe]] [[Airport]], [[Uganda]] by [[Operation Entebbe]]: Israeli commandos assault the building holding the hijackers and hostages killing all Palestinian hijackers and rescuing 105 persons, almost all Israeli hostages; three passengers and one commando are killed.
 
 
 
*Palestine 1977: [[Lufthansa Flight 181]] (also known as the ''Landshut'') was hijacked by Palestinian terrorists on a flight from [[Palma de Mallorca]] to [[Frankfurt]]. The ordeal ended in [[Mogadishu, Somalia|Mogadishu]] when [[GSG 9]] commandos stormed the plane. Three hijackers were killed and 86 hostages were freed. The pilot was killed. The hand of German [[Red Army Faction]] was suspected.
 
 
 
*Malaysia 1977 December 4: A Boeing 737 [[Malaysia Airlines Flight 653]] was hijacked and crashed in Tanjung Kupang, Johore killing 100 people aboard.
 
 
 
*Cyprus 1978: Two Arab guerrillas seized a plane in [[Cyprus]]. Egyptian commandos flew in uninvited to try to take the plane. Cypriot troops resisted and 15 Egyptians died in a 45-minute battle.
 
 
 
*East Germany 1979: Two East Germans hijacked an aircraft to [[West Berlin]]; see [[Judgment in Berlin]].
 
 
 
*USA 1979 June 20 and June 21: An American Airlines flight from New York to Chicago was hijacked by [[Nikola Kavaja]], a Serbian nationalist, demanding the release of a jailed fellow nationalist. Unable to secure his comrade's release, the hijacker released all hostages except for the pilot, co-pilot and one flight attendant. They flew from Chicago back to New York where he transferred to a Boeing 707, which flew to Ireland where the hijacker surrendered and was returned to the United States for trial. Weapon used was a home-made bomb. There were no casualties.<ref>Stewart, Christopher S., Nikola Kavaja: Interview with an Assassin. http://news.independent.co.uk/people/profiles/article2055456.ece. 10 December 2006.</ref><ref>http://www.tkb.org/Incident.jsp?incID=2471</ref>
 
 
 
*Pakistan 1981: A [[Pakistan International Airlines]] jet is hijacked and taken to [[Kabul]], where one passenger is killed before the plane flies on to [[Damascus]]; the hostages are finally released after 13 days when the Pakistani Government agrees to free fifty political prisoners.
 
 
 
*Indonesia 1981: The Hijacking of Flight [[Garuda Indonesia]] GA 206 on 28 March 1981. This was the first serious Indonesian airline hijacking, since the first case was a desperate Marine hijacker who was killed by the pilot himself. The hijackers, a group called Commando Jihad, hijacked the [[DC 9]] "Woyla," onroute from [[Palembang]] to [[Medan]], and ordered the pilot to fly the plane to [[Colombo]], Sri Lanka. But since the plane didn't have enough fuel, it refueled in [[Penang]], Malaysia and then to [[Don Muang]], Thailand. The hijackers demanded the release of Commando Jihad members imprisoned in Indonesia, and US $ 1.5 million, as well as a plane to take those prisoners to an unspecified destination. The [[Kopassus]] commandos who took part in this mission trained for only three days with totally unfamiliar weapons, brilliantly executed this fast-paced operation. One of the Kopassus commandos was shot by the hijacker leader, who then shot himself. All the other hijackers were killed. All the hostages were saved.
 
 
 
*Ireland 1981 An [[Aer Lingus]] flight from [[Dublin]] to [[London]] was hijacked and diverted to [[Le Touquet]] in France by a man demanding that the [[Pope]] release the third secret of [[Fatima]].  While authorities negotiated with the hijacker by radio in the cockpit, French special forces entered the rear of the aircraft and overpowered him.
 
 
 
*Sri Lanka 1982 July 1: A Sri Lankan, identified as Sepala Ekanayaka, who was 33 years old, hijacked an Alitalia jumbo jet from Bangkok, Thailand, in order to be united with his wife and child and to return to Sri Lanka.
 
 
 
*India 1982 August 22: A lone [[Sikh]] militant, armed with a pistol and a hand grenade, hijacked a Boeing 737 on a scheduled flight from Bombay to New Delhi carrying 69 persons. Indian security forces killed the hijacker and rescued all passengers.
 
 
 
*USSR 1983: [[Tbilisi hijacking incident]]
 
 
 
*India 1984 August 24: Seven young Sikh hijackers demanded an Indian Airlines jetliner flying from Delhi to Srinagar<ref>http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19840824-2&lang=en</ref> be flown to the United States. The plane was taken to UAE where the defense minister of UAE negotiated the release of the passengers. It was related to the Sikh secessionist struggle in the Indian state of Punjab. 
 
 
 
*Lebanon 1984: Lebanese Shi'a hijackers divert a [[Kuwait Airways]] flight to [[Tehran]]. The plane is taken by Iranian security forces who were dressed as custodial staff.[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/1578183.stm]
 
 
 
*Lebanon 1985: Lebanese Shi'a hijackers divert [[TWA Flight 847]] from [[Athens]] to [[Beirut]] with 153 people on board. The stand-off ends after [[Israel]] frees 31 Lebanese prisoners.
 
 
 
*Palestine 1985: Palestinians take over [[EgyptAir Flight 648]] and fly it to [[Malta]]. All together, 60 people died, most of them when Egyptian commandos stormed the aircraft.
 
 
 
*Pakistan 1986: 22 people are killed when Pakistani security forces storm [[Pan Am Flight 73]] at [[Karachi]], carrying 400 passengers and crew after a 16-hour siege.
 
 
 
*Kuwait 1988: Two Kuwaitis are killed in 1988 when Shi'a gunmen hijack a [[Kuwait Airways]] flight from Thailand and force it to fly to Algiers with more than 110 people on board; the hijack ends after 16 days when the hijackers free the remaining hostages and are allowed to leave Algiers.
 
 
 
*People's Republic of China 1990: Hijackers seized a plane from the [[People's Republic of China]] which later crashed as it tried to land in [[Guangzhou|Canton]], killing 128 people.
 
 
 
*Pakistan 1991: 26 March 1991, [[Singapore Airlines Flight 117]] hijacked by individuals claiming to be members of the [[Pakistan People's Party]]. Elite [[Singapore Special Operations Force]] members stormed the plane, killing all four hijackers and freeing all 118 passengers and 9 crew in an operation lasting just 30 seconds. None of the passengers and crew were hurt.
 
 
 
*India 1993:Two separate hijackings of Indian Airlines aircraft to '''Amritsar''', Punjab, India in the month of April. In the first case the hijacker was talked into surrendering; in the second, the Commandos stormed in and killed the sole hijacker. The Amritsar '''Deputy Commissioner''' Karan Bir Singh Sidhu was conferred the ''Convoy Safe Skies Award''.
 
 
 
*USA 1994: [[FedEx Corporation|FedEx]] [[FedEx Flight 705|Flight 705]] hijacked by disgruntled employee [[Auburn Calloway]] as it left [[Memphis, Tennessee]], with the intention of using it as a [[cruise missile]] against FedEx HQ.  He was subdued by the flight crew before an emergency landing back at Memphis.
 
 
 
*Algeria 1994: [[Air France Flight 8969]] is hijacked by four [[Armed Islamic Group|GIA]] terrorists planning to crash into the [[Eiffel Tower]].  After the execution of 3 passengers, [[GIGN]] commandos storm the plane killing all hijackers and freeing all passengers.
 
 
 
*Iran 1995: Iranian defector and flight attendant [[Rida Garari]] hijacked [[Kish Air]] flight 707, which landed in Israel. No casualties.
 
 
 
*Palestine 1996: [[Hemus Air]] Tu-154 aircraft was hijacked by the Palestinian Nadir Abdallah, flying from [[Beirut]] to [[Varna]]. The hijacker demamded that the aircraft be refuelled and given passage to [[Oslo]], [[Norway]] after landing at [[Varna Airport]]. All of the 150 passengers were freed at Varna, afterwards the crew continued the flight to Oslo.
 
 
 
*Ethiopia 1996: [[Ethiopian Airlines]] [[Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961|Flight 961]] crashed into the [[Indian Ocean]] near a beach in the [[Comoros Islands]] after hijackers refused to allow the pilot to land and refuel the plane. 125 passengers die and 50 survive.  This is only the third incident in which there were survivors of a passenger jet that intentionally ditched into water.
 
 
 
*Malta 1997: [[Air Malta]] Two men who hijacked an Air Malta aircraft en route from Malta to Turkey on June 9, 1997 surrendered to police at Cologne's airport early on the same day and freed without incident about 80 crew members and passengers on board.
 
 
 
*Japan 1999: [[All Nippon Airways Flight 61]] is hijacked by a lone man. He kills the pilot before he is subdued.
 
 
 
*Afghanistan 2000: [[Ariana Afghan Airlines]] Boeing 727 is hijacked on an internal flight within [[Taliban]]-controlled Afghanistan, and ended up at [[London Stansted Airport]], where most of the passengers claimed [[political asylum]]. See [[Afghan hijackers case 2006]].
 
 
 
*India 1999-2000: Pakistan based terrorists hijack [[Indian Airlines Flight 814]] and divert it to [[Kandahar]]. After a week-long stand-off India agrees to release three jailed Pakistani terrorists in exchange for the hostages. 1 hostage was stabbed to death and his body thrown on the tarmac as a "warning attack."
 
  
*Philippines 2000: [[Philippine Airlines Flight 812]] was hijacked en route from [[Davao City]], [[Philippines]] to [[Manila]]. The hijacker then escaped while the aircraft is still in the air via a parachute. The hijacker's body was later found.
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The first known carjacking took place on the open road in March 1912. The word carjacking is a portmanteau of car and hijacking. The [[Bonnot Gang]] targeted a luxury [[De Dion-Bouton|Dion Bouton]] in the Senart forest between [[Paris]] and [[Lyon]], [[France]]. The armed chauffeur and young secretary in the vehicle were killed.<ref>Driver Magazine, [http://drivermagazine.ca/phpcode/web/view_article.php?art_id=134 Carjacking]. Retrieved May 30, 2007.</ref>
  
*USA 2001: [[September 11, 2001 attacks|September 11 attacks]], eastern [[United States|USA]]: 19 terrorists hijack four planes ([[American Airlines]] [[American Airlines Flight 11|Flight 11]], [[American Airlines Flight 77]], [[United Airlines]] [[United Airlines Flight 93|Flight 93]], and [[United Airlines Flight 175]]). The aircraft were used as [[missiles]] to cause infrastructure damage in the worst terrorist attack on American soil in history; two of the planes, United Airlines Flight 175 and Flight 11 were crashed into  [[New York City]]'s [[World Trade Center]] towers, destroying the entire complex.  American Airlines Flight 77 was used in a similar fashion at the Pentagon, in [[Washington, D.C.]], which caused the destruction of the portion of that building hit. They are the three most deadly of all aircraft hijackings.  In the case of United 93 the intention was likely the same but the passengers, learning of the fate of the other three planes, attacked the cockpit, causing the hijackers to crash the plane in rural Pennsylvania, killing all on board.  By official count, 2,752 people died at the World Trade Center, 189 died in Washington, D. C., and 44 died crashing into a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
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The first recorded [[aircraft]] hijack was on February 21, 1931, in [[Arequipa]], [[Peru]]. [[Byron Rickards]], flying a [[Ford Tri-Motor]], was approached on the ground by armed revolutionaries. He refused to fly them anywhere and after a ten day stand-off Rickards was informed that the [[revolution]] was successful and they would release him in return for flying one of their number to [[Lima]]. Most hijackings have not been so farcical.  
  
*Turkey 2006: [[Turkish Airlines Flight 1476]], flying from Tirana to Istanbul, was hijacked in Greek airspace. The aircraft, with 107 passengers and six crew on board, transmitted two coded hijack signals which were picked up by the Greek air force.
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The first attempted hijack of a commercial airliner reportedly happened on July 16, 1948, when a failed effort to gain control of the ''[[Miss Macao]],'' a seaplane of a [[Cathay Pacific]] subsidiary company, caused it to crash into the sea off [[Macau]]. On June 30, 1948, a [[Bulgaria]]n commercial [[Junkers (Aircraft)|Junkers]] plane was successfully hijacked to [[Istanbul]] by a discharged diplomat and his family, who had to shoot dead the co-pilot (who happened to be the head of Bulgaria's civil aviation) and the [[radio]] operator in order to escape to the [[Western world|West]].  
  
*Russia 2007: an [[Aeroflot]] [[Airbus A320]] flying from [[Sheremetyevo International Airport|Moscow]] to [[Cointrin International Airport|Geneva]] was hijacked by a drunk man in [[Ruzyne International Airport|Prague]] and there released crew and passengers after he was arrested by the [[Czech police]].
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The first state-hijacking of an airplane was [[Israel]]'s hijacking of a [[Syrian]] airways civilian jet in 1954, with the intent "to obtain hostages in order to obtain the release of our prisoners in Damascus," who had been captured [[spy]]ing in [[Syria]]. [[Prime Minister]] [[Moshe Sharett]] accepted the "factual affirmation of the [[U.S. State Department]] that our action was without precedent in the history of international practice."
  
*Sudan 2007: an [[Air West]] Boeing 737 was hijacked over [[Sudan]], but landed safely at [[N'Djamena]], [[Chad]].
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Since 1947, sixty percent of hijackings have been [[refugee]] escapes. In 1968-1969 there was a massive rise in the number of hijackings. In 1968 there were 27 hijackings and attempted hijackings to [[Cuba]]. In 1969 there were 82 recorded hijack attempts worldwide, more than twice the total attempts from the 1947-1967 period. At that time, [[Palestine|Palestinian]]s were using hijacks as a political weapon to publicize their cause and to force the Israeli government to release Palestinian prisoners from jail.
  
*Mauritania 2007: an [[Air Mauritanie]] [[Boeing 737]] flying from [[Nouakchott]] to [[Las Palmas]] with 87 passengers on board was hijacked by a man who wanted to fly to [[Paris]], but the plane landed in an air base near Las Palmas and the hijacker, a [[Morocco|Moroccan]], was arrested.  
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Airliner hijackings have declined since the peak of 385 incidents between 1967-1976. In 1977-1986 the total had dropped to 300 incidents and in 1987-1996 this figure was reduced to 212.
  
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==Method==
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Carjackers often act when drivers are stopped at intersections, stop lights, signs, or highway entry points. They take advantage of the stopped car to threaten the driver and assume control of the vehicle.
  
*Cuba 2007: Cuban military deserters hijacked a bus, then used it to get into an airport's Terminal 2, where they failed to hijack an aircraft en-route to the United States. One military commander was killed and the deserters are at wanted.
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In most cases of airplane hijacking, the pilot is forced to fly according to the orders of the hijackers. Alternatively one of the hijackers can fly the plane himself, as was the case in the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]]; hijackers took flying lessons as preparation, or were selected by [[Al-Qaeda]] based partly on flying skills. In one case the official pilot hijacked the plane: In October, 1998, on an [[Air China]] flight from [[Beijing]] to [[Kunming]] in [[Yunnan]], he flew to [[Taiwan]] after threatening to crash the plane, killing the passengers, if other members of the crew prevented him from flying to Taiwan.<ref> B. Raman, [http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/asiapcf/9810/28/hijack.china.taiwan.02/index.html Air China pilot hijacks his own jet to Taiwan] ''CNN.'' (1998). Retrieved January 25, 2007.</ref>
  
==Prevention==
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Unlike the hijacking of land vehicles or ships, skyjacking is usually not perpetrated in order to rob the cargo. Rather, most aircraft hijackings are committed to use the passengers as [[hostage]]s in an effort to obtain transportation to a given location, to hold them for [[ransom]], or, as in the case of the [[United States|American]] planes that were hijacked to Cuba during the 1960s and 1970s, the release of comrades being held in [[prison]]. Another common motive is [[publicity]] for some cause or grievance.
  
Cockpit doors on most commercial airlines have been strengthened, and are now bullet proof.
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Hijackings for hostages have usually followed a pattern of negotiations between the hijackers and the authorities, followed by some form of settlement—not always the meeting of the hijackers' original demands—or the storming of the aircraft by armed [[police]] or special forces to rescue the hostages. Since the use of hijacked planes as [[suicide]] missiles in  [[September 11, 2001 attacks]], hijacking has become a different kind of security threat&mdash;though similar usages had apparently been attempted by [[Samuel Byck]] in 1974 and on [[Air France Flight 8969]] in 1994. Prior to September, 2001, the policy of most airlines was for the pilot to comply with hijackers' demands in the hope of a peaceful outcome. Since then, policies have reversed course, in favor of arming and armoring the cockpit.
In the [[United Kingdom]], [[United States]], [[Australia]] and [[India]], [[air Marshal (civil aviation)|air marshal]]s have also been added to some flights to deter and thwart hijackers. In addition, some have proposed remote control systems for aircraft whereby no one on board would have control over the plane's flight.  
 
  
In the case of a serious risk that an aircraft will be used for flying into a target, it may have to be shot down, killing all passengers and crew, to prevent more serious consequences.  
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==Hijacking and terrorism==
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Though not all hijackings are [[terrorism]] related, there exists a connection between the two. The most infamous example of this connection is the September 11, 2001 attacks executed by [[al Qaeda]] in which over 3,000 people were killed between the passengers and the targets into which they were flown. Another famous example is the September 1970 hijacking of four jets by Palestinian militants wanting the release of their comrades.<ref>BBC, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/low/dates/stories/september/6/newsid_2500000/2500667.stm On this day]. Retrieved June 9, 2007.</ref>
  
United States commercial aircraft pilots now have an option of carrying a pistol on the flight deck, as a last resort to thwart hijack attempts. Opponents proposed that shooting down the aircraft and killing everyone onboard would be more reasonable than a pilot firing a pistol in an airliner at a flight deck intruder. [[Explosive decompression]] in an aircraft, however, is a myth, and their objections are mostly hyperbole. [http://www.gadgetopia.com/post/2606]
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Hijacking presents terrorists with a very visible method of obtaining attention for their cause. The importance of airplanes as symbols of commerce and freedom makes them effective as prime targets. Additionally, the naturally confined passengers are ideal hostages, as escape is not a possibility.
  
Since "Hi, Jack" and "hijack" are [[homophones]] this pronunciation is now widely regarded as a security threat in many airports. [[Los Angeles International Airport]] has reminded people not to say "Hi, Jack" or "Hey, Jack," but rather, to say "Hello, Jack" instead.
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Terrorists have also hijacked other means of transportation including boats and trains. Nine Dutch Moluccans hijacked a train from Assen to Groningen in 1977, in an effort to obtain an independent homeland.<ref>Dutch News, [http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2007/06/moluccans_remember_train_hijack.php Moluccans remember train hijack]. Retrieved June 14, 2007.</ref> In 1985, four men representing the [[Palestine Liberation Front]] hijacked the passenger liner ''Achille Lauro,'' demanding the release of 50 Israeli-held prisoners. In March 2006, Marxist [[Naxal]]s hijacked a passenger train in northern [[India]] to protest the death of one of their members. They also robbed the passengers aboard.<ref>Institute of Peace & Conflict Studies, [http://www.ipcs.org/Terrorism_militaryIndex2.jsp?action=showView&kValue=1980&military=1015&mod=b&status=article Hijacking Train: The New Face of Red Terror]. Retrieved June 14, 2007.</ref>
  
One task of [[airport security]] is to prevent hijacks by screening passengers and keeping anything that could be used as a [[weapon]] (even smaller objects like nail clippers for example) off aircraft.
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==Hijacking Airplanes==
  
== Situation after September 11 ==  
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===Laws===
 +
There are three international agreements relevant to aircraft hijacking: [[The Tokyo Convention]], [[the Hague Convention]], and [[the Montreal Convention]]. Only the Hague Convention was convened specifically to address hijacking, the others refer to various other security aspects of aviation. Signed in the Hague on December 16, 1970, The "Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft" contains 14 articles relating to what constitutes hijacking and guidelines for what is expected of governments when dealing with hijackings. This article was inspired by a rash of airplane hijackings in the late 1960s.<ref>Sami Shubber, "Aircraft Hijacking under the Hague Convention 1970: A New Regime?" ''The International and Comparative Law Quarterly'', Vol. 22, No. 4. (Oct., 1973): 687-726.</ref> The convention does not apply to customs, law enforcement, or military aircraft. Thus its scope appears to exclusively encompass civilian aircraft. Importantly, the convention only comes into force if the aircraft takes off or lands in a place different than its place of registration. For aircraft with joint registration, one country is designated as the registration state for the purpose of the convention. The Hague Convention is significant in its establishment of an international definition of aircraft hijacking and a set of guidelines to address it. The full text can be found on the [[United Nations]] website.<ref>The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft.</ref>
  
Before the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]], plane crews advised passengers to sit quietly in order to increase their chances to survive. An unofficial protocol emerged, in which civilians and government authorities understood that in most cases violence from the hijackers was unlikely as long as they achieved their goal (often, as during the rash of American incidents in the 1970s, a trip to Cuba).
+
===Prevention===
 +
Options for preventing hijacking include screening to keep weapons off the airplane, putting [[Federal Air Marshal Service|air marshals]] on flights, and fortifying the cockpit to keep hijackers out. Cockpit doors on most commercial airlines have been strengthened, and are now bullet proof.  
  
Since the September 11 attacks, the situation for passengers and hijackers has changed. As in the situation of [[United Airlines Flight 93]], where an airliner crashed into a field during a fight between passengers and hijackers, passengers now have to calculate the risks of passive cooperation, not only for themselves but for those on the ground. Future hijackers may encounter greater resistance from passengers, making a hijacking more unlikely but, if they happen, bloodier.
+
In the [[United Kingdom]], [[United States]], [[Australia]], and [[India]], [[air Marshal (civil aviation)|air marshal]]s have also been added to some flights to deter and thwart hijackers. In addition, some have proposed remote control systems for aircraft whereby no one on board would have control over the plane's flight.  
  
Several nations have stated that they would shoot down hijacked commercial aircraft if it can be assumed that the hijackers intend to use the aircraft in 9/11-style as a weapon, despite killing innocent passengers onboard. According to reports, US fighter pilots have been training shooting down commercial airliners.[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3161354.stm] Other countries such as [[Poland]] have enacted laws or decrees that allow shooting down hijacked planes.[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4172487.stm]
+
In the case of the serious risk that an aircraft would be used for flying into a target, it would have to be shot down, killing all passengers and crew, to prevent more serious consequences.  
  
=== Germany: Shooting down aircraft and the constitution ===
+
United States commercial aircraft pilots now have an option of carrying a pistol on the flight deck, as a last resort to thwart hijack attempts. Opponents argued that shooting down the aircraft and killing everyone on board would be more reasonable than a pilot firing a pistol in an airliner at a flight deck intruder, due to the danger of explosive decompression. Such objections have been countered as baseless.<ref>Gadgetopia, [http://www.gadgetopia.com/post/2606 The Truth About Explosive Decompression]. Retrieved May 30, 2007.</ref>
In a widely regarded decision by the [[Federal Constitutional Court of Germany]], in February 2006, it struck down a law - "Luftsicherheitsgesetz" or "Air security law" - claiming such preventive measures were unconstitutional and would essentially be state-sponsored murder, even if such an act would save many more lives on the ground. The main reasoning behind this decision was that the state would be effectively taking the lives of innocent hostages in order to avoid a terrorist attack. Another reason was that the [[Minister of Defense]] is constitutionally not entitled to act in terrorism matters, as this is the duty of the state and federal police forces. ''See the [[:de:Urteil des Bundesverfassungsgerichts zum Luftsicherheitsgesetz 2005|German Wikipedia entry]], or [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4715878.stm]''
 
  
The [[President of Germany]], [[Horst Köhler]], himself urged judicial review of the constitutionality of the Luftsicherheitsgesetz after he signed it into law in 2005.
+
Since "Hi, Jack" and "hijack" are [[homophones]], this greeting is now widely regarded as a security threat in many airports. [[Los Angeles International Airport]] has reminded people not to say "Hi, Jack" or "Hey, Jack," but rather, to say "Hello, Jack" instead.
  
== International law issues ==
+
One task of [[airport security]] is to prevent hijacks by screening passengers and keeping anything that could be used as a [[weapon]], including small objects like nail clippers, from being taken aboard the aircraft.
===Convention on Offences and Certain Other Acts Committed on Board Aircraft (Tokyo Convention) ===
 
See the United Nations website for full text. [http://www.unodc.org/unodc/terrorism_convention_aircraft.html]
 
  
===Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft (Hague Convention)===
+
==Hijacking automobiles==
 +
===United States===
 +
In the [[United States]], a law was passed in 1992 making carjacking a federal [[crime]]. This occurred amidst great [[mass media|media]] attention into the apparent spike of carjacking [[theft]]s, several of which resulted in [[homicide]]. One of these was the notorious September 1992 carjacking of Pam Basu in [[Savage, Maryland]]. Basu was carjacked at a stop sign in town; she soon became entangled in her [[seatbelt]] and then dragged to death. [[Libertarian]]s and [[states' rights]] activists criticized this law, arguing that the control of crime is a matter for the states, not the federal government.
  
Signed in the Hague, on the 16 December 1970. Contains 14 articles relating to what constitutes hijacking and guidelines for what is expected of governments when dealing with hijackings. The convention does not apply to customs, law enforcement or military aircraft. Thus its scope appears to exclusively encompass civilian aircraft. Importantly, the convention only comes into force if the aircraft takes off or lands in a place different to its place of registration. For aircraft with joint registration, one country is designated as the registration state for the purpose of the convention.  
+
The [[United States Department of Justice]] estimates that in about one half of all carjacking attempts the attacker succeeds in stealing the victim's car. It estimated that, between 1987 and 1992, about 35,000 carjacking attempts took place per year, and, between 1992 and 1996, about 49,000 attempts took place per year. Carjacking has become more frequent because sophisticated devices and computer systems have prevented and discouraged theft of unattended cars.
  
See the United Nations website for full text. [http://www.unodc.org/unodc/terrorism_convention_aircraft_seizure.html]
+
===United Kingdom===
 
+
[[English law]] has three levels of offense under the [[Theft Act 1968]], each pertaining to the ''[[mens rea]]'' ([[Latin]] for "guilty mind") and the degree of violence used. The least serious is Taken Without Owner's Consent (TWOC), which covers any unauthorized taking of a "conveyance," s1 [[theft]] applies when the carjacker intends to permanently deprive the owner of property, while violent carjacking is an aggravated form of theft under §8 [[robbery]].
===Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Civil Aviation (Montreal Convention) ===
 
 
 
See the United Nations website for full text. [http://www.unodc.org/unodc/terrorism_convention_civil_aviation.html]
 
 
 
==Carjacking==
 
 
 
 
 
In the [[United States]], '''carjacking''' is the [[crime]] of [[motor vehicle theft|stealing a motor vehicle]] when the vehicle is occupied. Typically, the carjacker is armed, and the driver is forced out of the car at gunpoint. The word is a [[portmanteau]] of [[automobile|car]] and [[hijacking]].
 
 
 
==Discussion==
 
This crime has become more common in recent years.{{Fact|date=April 2007}}  The crime is extremely hazardous, threatening the physical safety of both the carjacker and the victim.  It is sometimes possible for the victim to outmaneuver the carjacker and run him over, or, if the victim is armed, shoot the carjacker. To secure the car, the carjacker may sometimes shoot the victim or physically push the victim out of the driver's seat to force him or her out of the car.
 
 
 
==United States==
 
In the United States, a law was passed in 1992 making carjacking a federal crime. This occurred amidst great media attention into the apparent spate of carjacking thefts, several of which resulted in [[homicide]]. One of these was the notorious September 1992 carjacking of Pam Basu in [[Savage, Maryland]]. Basu was carjacked at a stop sign in town; she soon became entangled in her [[seatbelt]] and then dragged to death. [[Libertarian]]s and [[states' rights]] activists criticized this law, arguing that the control of crime is a matter for the states, not the federal government, and asserted that carjacking was made a federal crime only to make some incumbents appear [[tough on crime]] to gain votes.
 
 
 
The [[United States Department of Justice]] estimates that in about half of all carjacking attempts, the attacker succeeds in stealing the victim's car. It estimated that, between 1987 and 1992, about 35,000 carjacking attempts took place per year, and, between 1992 and 1996, about 49,000 attempts took place per year. Carjacking has become more frequent in recent years because sophisticated devices and computer systems have prevented and discouraged [[motor vehicle theft|theft]] of ''unattended'' cars.
 
 
 
==United Kingdom==
 
[[English law]] has three levels of offense under the [[Theft Act 1968]], each pertaining to the [[mens rea]] ([[Latin]] for "guilty mind") and the degree of violence used. The least serious is [[TWOC]], which covers any unauthorized taking of a "conveyance," s1 [[theft]] applies when the carjacker intends to permanently deprive the owner of property, and violent carjacking is an aggravated form of theft under §8 [[robbery]].{{Fact|date=February 2007}} Amid increasing carjacking cases in the UK, there has been some discussion whether specific carjacking laws are necessary. The current view is that all aspects of the offense are covered in the law, whether as road traffic offenses, public order offenses, the use of weapons and firearms, etc., and there is no benefit in consolidating all the elements in one offense.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==History==
 
The first known carjacking took place on the open road in March 1912. The [[Bonnot Gang]] targeted a luxury [[De Dion-Bouton|Dion Bouton]] in the Senart forest between [[Paris]] and [[Lyon]], [[France]]. The armed chauffeur and young secretary in the vehicle were killed. {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==Incidents of carjacking==
 
 
 
*On August 7, 2005, singer-songwriter [[Marc Cohn]] was shot in the head during an attempted carjacking in [[Denver, Colorado]]. He survived. {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
*Early on the morning of October 23, 2005, rapper [[Cam'ron]] was shot and wounded during a botched carjacking in [[Washington, D.C.]] {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
 
 
== Carjacking in popular culture ==
 
* Video games such as ''[[Grand Theft Auto (series)|Grand Theft Auto]]'', ''[[Driv3r]]'' and [[Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction]] feature carjacking as part of the gameplay, which has attracted criticism from public figures.
 
 
 
* A truck hijacking scam was the subject of several episodes of the popular [[HBO]] series ''[[The Sopranos]]'', and perpetrated by [[List of characters from The Sopranos in the DiMeo Crime Family#Brendan Filone|Brendan Filone]] and [[Christopher Moltisanti]].
 
 
 
* The South African movie ''Tsotsi'' features a carjacking as the main plot element.
 
 
 
* [[Larry Niven]]'s short story "The Deadlier Weapon" features a carjacking.
 
 
 
*On the animated series [[Family Guy]], on the episode [[Road to Rupert]], to get out of [[Aspen, Colorado]] Stewie and Brian carjack someone.
 
 
 
*In episodes 230 and 231 of the [[Case Closed]] (Detective Conan) [[anime]] and its corresponding manga files, a bus jacking occurs that involves the main characters and their calculated attempts to overthrow the hijacker and uncover their accomplice.
 
 
 
*In the [[Death Note]] anime and manga, a bus jacking becomes a crucial turning point in the plot.
 
  
 +
==Hijacking in the twenty-first century==
 +
Before the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]], plane crews advised passengers to sit quietly in order to increase their chances of survival. An unofficial protocol emerged, in which civilians and government authorities understood that in most cases violence from the hijackers was unlikely as long as they achieved their goal (often, as during the rash of American incidents in the 1970s, a trip to [[Cuba]]).
  
 +
Since the September 11 attacks by [[terrorism|terrorists]], the situation for passengers and hijackers has changed. As in the example of [[United Airlines Flight 93]], where an airliner crashed into a field during a fight between passengers and hijackers, passengers now have to calculate the risks of passive cooperation, not only for themselves but for those on the ground. Future hijackers may encounter greater resistance from passengers, increasing the potential for bloody conflict.
  
 +
Several nations have stated that they would shoot down hijacked commercial aircraft, despite killing innocent passengers on board, if it could be assumed that the hijackers intent was to use the aircraft in 9/11-style as a weapon. According to reports, U.S. fighter pilots have been trained in shooting down commercial airliners.<ref>BBC, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3161354.stm US pilots train shooting civilian planes]. Retrieved May 30, 2007.</ref> Other countries such as [[Poland]]<ref>BBC, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4172487.stm Poland to down hijacked aircraft], January 13, 2005. Retrieved May 30, 2007.</ref> and [[India]]<ref>BBC, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4150640.stm "India adopts tough hijack policy"], August 14, 2005. Retrieved July 26, 2011.</ref> enacted laws or decrees that allow shooting down hijacked planes, although the Polish Constitutional Court later decided that the regulations were unconstitutional and dismissed them.
 +
<ref>[http://www.trybunal.gov.pl/eng/summaries/documents/K_44_07_GB.pdf Permissibility of shooting down a passenger aircraft in the event of a danger that it has been used for unlawful acts, and where state security is threatened], Judgement of 30th September 2008, K 44/07. Retrieved July 26, 2011.</ref>
  
 +
== Well-known hijackings ==
 +
* [[Cuba]] 1958, November 1: First Cuba-to-U.S. hijacking. A Cuban plane en route from Miami to [[Varadero]] to Havana was hijacked by Cuban militants. The hijackers were trying to land at Sierra Cristal in Eastern Cuba to deliver weapons to [[Raúl Castro]]'s rebels. As night approached, the plane ran out of fuel and tried an emergency landing at the Preston sugar mill. It fell short and instead landed in the ocean, breaking apart and killing most passengers and crew.<ref> Planecrashinfo.com, [http://www.planecrashinfo.com/1958/1958-41.htm Accident details]. Retrieved May 30, 2007.</ref>
 +
* [[Palestine]] 1968: The first Arab-Israeli hijacking, as three members of [[Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine]] (PFLP) hijacked an [[El Al]] plane to [[Rome]]. Diverting to [[Algiers]], the negotiations extended over forty days. Both the hijackers and the hostages were set free. This was the first and the only successful hijacking of an El Al flight.
 +
* [[Western Europe]] 1970: Four Palestinian militants took control of four planes headed from Amsterdam, Frankfurt, and Zurich headed for New York in order to negotiate the release of their allies from prison.
 +
* United States 1971: [[D. B. Cooper]] hijacked [[Northwest Orient Airlines flight 305]] and obtained $200,000 ransom for the release of the plane's passengers. Cooper proceeded to [[parachute]] from the rear of the [[Boeing 727]] and was never found.
 +
* United States 1974 February 22: [[Samuel Byck]] shot and killed [[Maryland Aviation Administration]] Police Officer Neal Ramsburg at BWI before storming aboard [[Delta Air Lines]] flight 523 to Atlanta. He gained access to the cockpit while the plane was on the ground, intending to assassinate [[President]] [[Richard Nixon]] by flying the [[McDonnell Douglas DC-9|DC-9]] into the [[White House]]. He shot both the pilot and the copilot before he was shot through the aircraft window by another officer.
 +
* Palestine 1976: On 27 June, an [[Air France]] plane with 248 passengers and a flight crew of 12 was hijacked by Palestinian terrorists and supporters and flown to Entebbe, near Kampala, the capital of [[Uganda]]. Non-[[Israel]]i passengers were released.<ref>Yossi Melman, [http://www.haaretz.com/weekend/week-s-end/setting-the-record-straight-entebbe-was-not-auschwitz-1.372131 "Setting the record straight: Entebbe was not Auschwitz"], Haaretz.com, July 8, 20011. Retrieved July 26, 2011.</ref> Israel Defense Forces (IDF) rescued 102 hostages in an assault on the building. Three hostages, all the hijackers, and one Israeli commando were killed; a fourth hostage died in a Ugandan hospital, apparently at the hands of Ugandan forces.<ref>Robert Verkaik, [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/revealed-the-fate-of-idi-amins-hijack-victim-436181.html "Revealed: the fate of Idi Amin's hijack victim"], ''The Independent'' February 13, 2007. Retrieved July 26, 2011.</ref> 45 Ugandan soldiers also died in the raid, when they opened fire on the Israeli forces.
 +
* [[Malaysia]] 1977 December 4: A Boeing 737, [[Malaysia Airlines Flight 653]], was hijacked and crashed in Tanjung Kupang, Johore killing 100 people aboard.
 +
* [[Cyprus]] 1978: Two Arab [[guerrilla warfare|guerrillas]] seized a plane in Cyprus. Egyptian commandos flew in uninvited to try to take the plane. Cypriot troops resisted and 15 Egyptians died in a 45-minute battle.
 +
* United States 1979, June 20 and June 21: An American Airlines flight from New York to Chicago was hijacked by [[Nikola Kavaja]], a [[Serbia]]n nationalist, demanding the release of a jailed fellow nationalist. Unable to secure his comrade's release, the hijacker released all hostages except for the pilot, co-pilot, and one flight attendant. They flew from Chicago back to New York where he transferred to a Boeing 707, which flew to [[Ireland]] where the hijacker surrendered and was returned to the United States for trial. The weapon used was a home-made bomb. There were no casualties.<ref>Christopher S. Stewart, [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/profiles/article2055456.ece Nikola Kavaja: Interview with an Assassin.] Retrieved December 10, 2006.</ref>
 +
* [[Indonesia]] 1981: The Hijacking of Flight [[Garuda Indonesia]] GA 206 on March 28, 1981. The hijackers, a group called Commando Jihad, hijacked the [[DC 9]] "Woyla," onroute from [[Palembang]] to [[Medan]], and ordered the pilot to fly the plane to [[Colombo]], [[Sri Lanka]]. But since the plane did not have enough fuel, it refueled in [[Penang]], Malaysia and then flew to [[Don Muang]], [[Thailand]]. The hijackers demanded the release of Commando Jihad members imprisoned in Indonesia, and U.S. $ 1.5 million, as well as a plane to take those prisoners to an unspecified destination. The [[Kopassus]] commandos who took part in this mission trained for only three days with totally unfamiliar weapons. One of the Kopassus commandos was shot by the hijacker leader, who then shot himself. All the other hijackers were killed. All the hostages were saved.
 +
* Ireland 1981: An [[Aer Lingus]] flight from [[Dublin]] to [[London]] was hijacked and diverted to [[Le Touquet]] in [[France]] by a man demanding that the [[Pope]] release the third secret of [[Fatima]]. While authorities negotiated with the hijacker by radio in the cockpit, French special forces entered the rear of the aircraft and overpowered him.
 +
* India 1984, August 24: Seven young [[Sikh]] hijackers demanded an Indian Airlines jetliner flying from Delhi to Srinagar be flown to the United States. The plane was taken to UAE where the defense minister of UAE negotiated the release of the passengers. It was related to the Sikh secessionist struggle in the Indian state of Punjab.<ref>Aviation Safety Network, [http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19840824-2&lang=en Hijacking]. Retrieved May 30, 2007.</ref> 
 +
* [[Lebanon]] 1984: Lebanese Shi'a hijackers diverted a [[Kuwait Airways]] flight to [[Tehran]]. The plane was taken by [[Iran]]ian security forces who were dressed as custodial staff.<ref>BBC, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/1578183.stm History of airliner hijackings]. Retrieved May 30, 2007.</ref>
 +
* [[Algeria]] 1994: [[Air France Flight 8969]] was hijacked by four [[Armed Islamic Group|GIA]] terrorists planning to crash into the [[Eiffel Tower]]. After the execution of 3 passengers, [[GIGN]] commandos stormed the plane, killing all hijackers and freeing all passengers.
 +
* United States 2001: [[September 11, 2001 attacks|September 11 attacks]], eastern [[United States|U.S.]]: 19 terrorists hijack four planes ([[American Airlines]] [[American Airlines Flight 11|Flight 11]], [[American Airlines Flight 77]], [[United Airlines]] [[United Airlines Flight 93|Flight 93]], and [[United Airlines Flight 175]]). The aircraft were used as [[missile]]s to cause infrastructure damage in the worst terrorist attack on American soil in history; two of the planes, United Airlines Flight 175 and Flight 11 were crashed into [[New York City]]'s [[World Trade Center]] towers, destroying the entire complex. American Airlines Flight 77 was used in a similar fashion at the [[Pentagon]], in [[Washington, D.C.]], which caused the destruction of a portion of the building. They are the three most deadly of all aircraft hijackings. In the case of United 93, the intention was likely the same but the passengers, learning of the fate of the other three planes, attacked the cockpit, causing the hijackers to crash the plane in rural [[Pennsylvania]], killing all on board.
 +
* [[Turkey]] 2006: [[Turkish Airlines Flight 1476]], flying from Tirana to [[Istanbul]], was hijacked in Greek airspace. The aircraft, with 107 passengers and six crew on board, transmitted two coded hijack signals which were picked up by the Greek air force.
 +
* [[Russia]] 2007: an [[Aeroflot]] [[Airbus A320]] flying from [[Moscow]] to [[Geneva]] was hijacked by a drunk man in [[Prague]]. The crew and passengers were released after his arrest by the [[Czech police]].
 +
* [[Mauritania]] 2007: An [[Air Mauritanie]] [[Boeing 737]] flying from [[Nouakchott]] to [[Las Palmas]] with 87 passengers on board was hijacked by a man who wanted to fly to [[Paris]], but the plane landed in an air base near Las Palmas and the hijacker, a [[Morocco|Moroccan]], was arrested.
 +
* Cuba 2007: Cuban military deserters hijacked a bus, then used it to get into an airport's terminal, where they failed to hijack an aircraft en-route to the United States. One military commander was killed.
 +
* [[Cyprus]] 2007: an [[Atlasjet]] [[MD-80]] en route from [[Nicosia]] to [[Istanbul]] was hijacked by two Arab students, who said they were [[Al Qaeda]] operatives, one trained in Afghanistan, and wanted to go to [[Tehran]], [[Iran]]. The plane landed in [[Antalya]], the passengers escaped and the hijackers were arrested.<ref>Sebnem Arsu, [http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/19/europe/turkey.php "Pilots and passengers foil hijacking of Turkish jet"], ''The New York Times'', August 19, 2007. Retrieved July 26, 2011.</ref>
 +
* Turkey 2011: [[Turkish Airlines Flight 1754]], flying from [[Oslo]], [[Norway]] to [[Istanbul]], was in [[Bulgaria]]n airspace when an unsuccessful attempt was made to hijack it. The hijacker said that he had a [[bomb]] and that he would blow up the aircraft unless the plane returned to Norway. Passengers overpowered the hijacker and the flight safely landed at [[Atatürk International Airport]], Istanbul. There were no injuries and the suspect was arrested.<ref> [http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=man-attempts-to-hijack-thy-plane-in-istanbul-reports-say-2011-01-05 "Turkish Airlines hijack attempt foiled by passengers"], ''Hürriyet Daily News'', January 5, 2011. Retrieved July 26, 2011.</ref>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 211: Line 101:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 +
* Baker, David. ''Hijacking And Security.'' Rourke Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1595154884
 +
* de B. Taillon, J. Paul. ''Hijacking and Hostages: Government Responses to Terrorism.'' Praeger Publishers, 2002. ISBN 0275974685
 +
* Raab, David. ''Terror in Black September: The First Eyewitness Account of the Infamous 1970 Hijackings.'' Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. ISBN 978-1403984203
 +
* Stevenson, William. ''90 minutes at Entebbe''. Bantam Books, 1976. ISBN 978-0553104820
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.uliderickson.net/ Uli Derickson - Legacy of Courage]
+
All links retrieved December 24, 2017.
 
 
* [http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/cus96.pdf U.S. DOJ's Bureau of Justice Statistics report on carjackings in the U.S., 1992-1996]
 
* [http://www.snopes.com/crime/warnings/carjack.asp Do carjackers place fliers on the rear windows of automobiles?  No.] (from snopes.com)
 
* [http://www.securisat.net/index.php?option=com_wrapper&Itemid=37/ A Car jacking movie (fiction)]
 
  
 +
* [http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/hague1970.html Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft (Hijacking Convention), 860 U.N.T.S. 105, entered into force Oct. 14, 1971.]
  
  
 
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{{Credits|Aircraft_hijacking|134468017|Carjacking|134513279|}}

Latest revision as of 15:49, 25 January 2023


Hijacking is the assumption of control of a vehicle through some means of coercion, often the threat of violence. The two most prevalent forms of hijacking are of aircraft and automobiles. The motivations of these crimes differ greatly based on what is being hijacked, with the hijacking of planes often being politically motivated, while carjackers are usually financially motivated. Aircraft hijacking (also known as skyjacking and aircraft piracy) is the take-over of an aircraft, by a person or group, usually armed. The first recorded incident was in March 1912, and since then, there have been many larger, more destructive hijackings, including the September 11, 2001 attacks which led to the death of over 3,000 innocent people.

While law enforcement and international efforts have been made to increase security and reduce such threats, the ultimate solution to the problem of hijacking is to resolve the issues that drive the perpetrators to commit these crimes. Perpetrators who are willing to sacrifice their own lives in suicide missions will not be deterred by the threat of any kind of punishment, nor will they cease because of security measures taken in response to previously carried out actions. The solution to hijacking is not specific to the act but to the underlying problems of human suffering.

Background

Did you know?
The term hijacking arose in connection with the seizing of liquor trucks during Prohibition in the United States.

The term hijacking arose in connection with the seizing of liquor trucks during Prohibition in the United States.[1] This usage in reference to commandeering vessels laden with valuable goods remains prevalent.

The first known carjacking took place on the open road in March 1912. The word carjacking is a portmanteau of car and hijacking. The Bonnot Gang targeted a luxury Dion Bouton in the Senart forest between Paris and Lyon, France. The armed chauffeur and young secretary in the vehicle were killed.[2]

The first recorded aircraft hijack was on February 21, 1931, in Arequipa, Peru. Byron Rickards, flying a Ford Tri-Motor, was approached on the ground by armed revolutionaries. He refused to fly them anywhere and after a ten day stand-off Rickards was informed that the revolution was successful and they would release him in return for flying one of their number to Lima. Most hijackings have not been so farcical.

The first attempted hijack of a commercial airliner reportedly happened on July 16, 1948, when a failed effort to gain control of the Miss Macao, a seaplane of a Cathay Pacific subsidiary company, caused it to crash into the sea off Macau. On June 30, 1948, a Bulgarian commercial Junkers plane was successfully hijacked to Istanbul by a discharged diplomat and his family, who had to shoot dead the co-pilot (who happened to be the head of Bulgaria's civil aviation) and the radio operator in order to escape to the West.

The first state-hijacking of an airplane was Israel's hijacking of a Syrian airways civilian jet in 1954, with the intent "to obtain hostages in order to obtain the release of our prisoners in Damascus," who had been captured spying in Syria. Prime Minister Moshe Sharett accepted the "factual affirmation of the U.S. State Department that our action was without precedent in the history of international practice."

Since 1947, sixty percent of hijackings have been refugee escapes. In 1968-1969 there was a massive rise in the number of hijackings. In 1968 there were 27 hijackings and attempted hijackings to Cuba. In 1969 there were 82 recorded hijack attempts worldwide, more than twice the total attempts from the 1947-1967 period. At that time, Palestinians were using hijacks as a political weapon to publicize their cause and to force the Israeli government to release Palestinian prisoners from jail.

Airliner hijackings have declined since the peak of 385 incidents between 1967-1976. In 1977-1986 the total had dropped to 300 incidents and in 1987-1996 this figure was reduced to 212.

Method

Carjackers often act when drivers are stopped at intersections, stop lights, signs, or highway entry points. They take advantage of the stopped car to threaten the driver and assume control of the vehicle.

In most cases of airplane hijacking, the pilot is forced to fly according to the orders of the hijackers. Alternatively one of the hijackers can fly the plane himself, as was the case in the September 11, 2001 attacks; hijackers took flying lessons as preparation, or were selected by Al-Qaeda based partly on flying skills. In one case the official pilot hijacked the plane: In October, 1998, on an Air China flight from Beijing to Kunming in Yunnan, he flew to Taiwan after threatening to crash the plane, killing the passengers, if other members of the crew prevented him from flying to Taiwan.[3]

Unlike the hijacking of land vehicles or ships, skyjacking is usually not perpetrated in order to rob the cargo. Rather, most aircraft hijackings are committed to use the passengers as hostages in an effort to obtain transportation to a given location, to hold them for ransom, or, as in the case of the American planes that were hijacked to Cuba during the 1960s and 1970s, the release of comrades being held in prison. Another common motive is publicity for some cause or grievance.

Hijackings for hostages have usually followed a pattern of negotiations between the hijackers and the authorities, followed by some form of settlement—not always the meeting of the hijackers' original demands—or the storming of the aircraft by armed police or special forces to rescue the hostages. Since the use of hijacked planes as suicide missiles in September 11, 2001 attacks, hijacking has become a different kind of security threat—though similar usages had apparently been attempted by Samuel Byck in 1974 and on Air France Flight 8969 in 1994. Prior to September, 2001, the policy of most airlines was for the pilot to comply with hijackers' demands in the hope of a peaceful outcome. Since then, policies have reversed course, in favor of arming and armoring the cockpit.

Hijacking and terrorism

Though not all hijackings are terrorism related, there exists a connection between the two. The most infamous example of this connection is the September 11, 2001 attacks executed by al Qaeda in which over 3,000 people were killed between the passengers and the targets into which they were flown. Another famous example is the September 1970 hijacking of four jets by Palestinian militants wanting the release of their comrades.[4]

Hijacking presents terrorists with a very visible method of obtaining attention for their cause. The importance of airplanes as symbols of commerce and freedom makes them effective as prime targets. Additionally, the naturally confined passengers are ideal hostages, as escape is not a possibility.

Terrorists have also hijacked other means of transportation including boats and trains. Nine Dutch Moluccans hijacked a train from Assen to Groningen in 1977, in an effort to obtain an independent homeland.[5] In 1985, four men representing the Palestine Liberation Front hijacked the passenger liner Achille Lauro, demanding the release of 50 Israeli-held prisoners. In March 2006, Marxist Naxals hijacked a passenger train in northern India to protest the death of one of their members. They also robbed the passengers aboard.[6]

Hijacking Airplanes

Laws

There are three international agreements relevant to aircraft hijacking: The Tokyo Convention, the Hague Convention, and the Montreal Convention. Only the Hague Convention was convened specifically to address hijacking, the others refer to various other security aspects of aviation. Signed in the Hague on December 16, 1970, The "Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft" contains 14 articles relating to what constitutes hijacking and guidelines for what is expected of governments when dealing with hijackings. This article was inspired by a rash of airplane hijackings in the late 1960s.[7] The convention does not apply to customs, law enforcement, or military aircraft. Thus its scope appears to exclusively encompass civilian aircraft. Importantly, the convention only comes into force if the aircraft takes off or lands in a place different than its place of registration. For aircraft with joint registration, one country is designated as the registration state for the purpose of the convention. The Hague Convention is significant in its establishment of an international definition of aircraft hijacking and a set of guidelines to address it. The full text can be found on the United Nations website.[8]

Prevention

Options for preventing hijacking include screening to keep weapons off the airplane, putting air marshals on flights, and fortifying the cockpit to keep hijackers out. Cockpit doors on most commercial airlines have been strengthened, and are now bullet proof.

In the United Kingdom, United States, Australia, and India, air marshals have also been added to some flights to deter and thwart hijackers. In addition, some have proposed remote control systems for aircraft whereby no one on board would have control over the plane's flight.

In the case of the serious risk that an aircraft would be used for flying into a target, it would have to be shot down, killing all passengers and crew, to prevent more serious consequences.

United States commercial aircraft pilots now have an option of carrying a pistol on the flight deck, as a last resort to thwart hijack attempts. Opponents argued that shooting down the aircraft and killing everyone on board would be more reasonable than a pilot firing a pistol in an airliner at a flight deck intruder, due to the danger of explosive decompression. Such objections have been countered as baseless.[9]

Since "Hi, Jack" and "hijack" are homophones, this greeting is now widely regarded as a security threat in many airports. Los Angeles International Airport has reminded people not to say "Hi, Jack" or "Hey, Jack," but rather, to say "Hello, Jack" instead.

One task of airport security is to prevent hijacks by screening passengers and keeping anything that could be used as a weapon, including small objects like nail clippers, from being taken aboard the aircraft.

Hijacking automobiles

United States

In the United States, a law was passed in 1992 making carjacking a federal crime. This occurred amidst great media attention into the apparent spike of carjacking thefts, several of which resulted in homicide. One of these was the notorious September 1992 carjacking of Pam Basu in Savage, Maryland. Basu was carjacked at a stop sign in town; she soon became entangled in her seatbelt and then dragged to death. Libertarians and states' rights activists criticized this law, arguing that the control of crime is a matter for the states, not the federal government.

The United States Department of Justice estimates that in about one half of all carjacking attempts the attacker succeeds in stealing the victim's car. It estimated that, between 1987 and 1992, about 35,000 carjacking attempts took place per year, and, between 1992 and 1996, about 49,000 attempts took place per year. Carjacking has become more frequent because sophisticated devices and computer systems have prevented and discouraged theft of unattended cars.

United Kingdom

English law has three levels of offense under the Theft Act 1968, each pertaining to the mens rea (Latin for "guilty mind") and the degree of violence used. The least serious is Taken Without Owner's Consent (TWOC), which covers any unauthorized taking of a "conveyance," s1 theft applies when the carjacker intends to permanently deprive the owner of property, while violent carjacking is an aggravated form of theft under §8 robbery.

Hijacking in the twenty-first century

Before the September 11, 2001 attacks, plane crews advised passengers to sit quietly in order to increase their chances of survival. An unofficial protocol emerged, in which civilians and government authorities understood that in most cases violence from the hijackers was unlikely as long as they achieved their goal (often, as during the rash of American incidents in the 1970s, a trip to Cuba).

Since the September 11 attacks by terrorists, the situation for passengers and hijackers has changed. As in the example of United Airlines Flight 93, where an airliner crashed into a field during a fight between passengers and hijackers, passengers now have to calculate the risks of passive cooperation, not only for themselves but for those on the ground. Future hijackers may encounter greater resistance from passengers, increasing the potential for bloody conflict.

Several nations have stated that they would shoot down hijacked commercial aircraft, despite killing innocent passengers on board, if it could be assumed that the hijackers intent was to use the aircraft in 9/11-style as a weapon. According to reports, U.S. fighter pilots have been trained in shooting down commercial airliners.[10] Other countries such as Poland[11] and India[12] enacted laws or decrees that allow shooting down hijacked planes, although the Polish Constitutional Court later decided that the regulations were unconstitutional and dismissed them. [13]

Well-known hijackings

  • Cuba 1958, November 1: First Cuba-to-U.S. hijacking. A Cuban plane en route from Miami to Varadero to Havana was hijacked by Cuban militants. The hijackers were trying to land at Sierra Cristal in Eastern Cuba to deliver weapons to Raúl Castro's rebels. As night approached, the plane ran out of fuel and tried an emergency landing at the Preston sugar mill. It fell short and instead landed in the ocean, breaking apart and killing most passengers and crew.[14]
  • Palestine 1968: The first Arab-Israeli hijacking, as three members of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) hijacked an El Al plane to Rome. Diverting to Algiers, the negotiations extended over forty days. Both the hijackers and the hostages were set free. This was the first and the only successful hijacking of an El Al flight.
  • Western Europe 1970: Four Palestinian militants took control of four planes headed from Amsterdam, Frankfurt, and Zurich headed for New York in order to negotiate the release of their allies from prison.
  • United States 1971: D. B. Cooper hijacked Northwest Orient Airlines flight 305 and obtained $200,000 ransom for the release of the plane's passengers. Cooper proceeded to parachute from the rear of the Boeing 727 and was never found.
  • United States 1974 February 22: Samuel Byck shot and killed Maryland Aviation Administration Police Officer Neal Ramsburg at BWI before storming aboard Delta Air Lines flight 523 to Atlanta. He gained access to the cockpit while the plane was on the ground, intending to assassinate President Richard Nixon by flying the DC-9 into the White House. He shot both the pilot and the copilot before he was shot through the aircraft window by another officer.
  • Palestine 1976: On 27 June, an Air France plane with 248 passengers and a flight crew of 12 was hijacked by Palestinian terrorists and supporters and flown to Entebbe, near Kampala, the capital of Uganda. Non-Israeli passengers were released.[15] Israel Defense Forces (IDF) rescued 102 hostages in an assault on the building. Three hostages, all the hijackers, and one Israeli commando were killed; a fourth hostage died in a Ugandan hospital, apparently at the hands of Ugandan forces.[16] 45 Ugandan soldiers also died in the raid, when they opened fire on the Israeli forces.
  • Malaysia 1977 December 4: A Boeing 737, Malaysia Airlines Flight 653, was hijacked and crashed in Tanjung Kupang, Johore killing 100 people aboard.
  • Cyprus 1978: Two Arab guerrillas seized a plane in Cyprus. Egyptian commandos flew in uninvited to try to take the plane. Cypriot troops resisted and 15 Egyptians died in a 45-minute battle.
  • United States 1979, June 20 and June 21: An American Airlines flight from New York to Chicago was hijacked by Nikola Kavaja, a Serbian nationalist, demanding the release of a jailed fellow nationalist. Unable to secure his comrade's release, the hijacker released all hostages except for the pilot, co-pilot, and one flight attendant. They flew from Chicago back to New York where he transferred to a Boeing 707, which flew to Ireland where the hijacker surrendered and was returned to the United States for trial. The weapon used was a home-made bomb. There were no casualties.[17]
  • Indonesia 1981: The Hijacking of Flight Garuda Indonesia GA 206 on March 28, 1981. The hijackers, a group called Commando Jihad, hijacked the DC 9 "Woyla," onroute from Palembang to Medan, and ordered the pilot to fly the plane to Colombo, Sri Lanka. But since the plane did not have enough fuel, it refueled in Penang, Malaysia and then flew to Don Muang, Thailand. The hijackers demanded the release of Commando Jihad members imprisoned in Indonesia, and U.S. $ 1.5 million, as well as a plane to take those prisoners to an unspecified destination. The Kopassus commandos who took part in this mission trained for only three days with totally unfamiliar weapons. One of the Kopassus commandos was shot by the hijacker leader, who then shot himself. All the other hijackers were killed. All the hostages were saved.
  • Ireland 1981: An Aer Lingus flight from Dublin to London was hijacked and diverted to Le Touquet in France by a man demanding that the Pope release the third secret of Fatima. While authorities negotiated with the hijacker by radio in the cockpit, French special forces entered the rear of the aircraft and overpowered him.
  • India 1984, August 24: Seven young Sikh hijackers demanded an Indian Airlines jetliner flying from Delhi to Srinagar be flown to the United States. The plane was taken to UAE where the defense minister of UAE negotiated the release of the passengers. It was related to the Sikh secessionist struggle in the Indian state of Punjab.[18]
  • Lebanon 1984: Lebanese Shi'a hijackers diverted a Kuwait Airways flight to Tehran. The plane was taken by Iranian security forces who were dressed as custodial staff.[19]
  • Algeria 1994: Air France Flight 8969 was hijacked by four GIA terrorists planning to crash into the Eiffel Tower. After the execution of 3 passengers, GIGN commandos stormed the plane, killing all hijackers and freeing all passengers.
  • United States 2001: September 11 attacks, eastern U.S.: 19 terrorists hijack four planes (American Airlines Flight 11, American Airlines Flight 77, United Airlines Flight 93, and United Airlines Flight 175). The aircraft were used as missiles to cause infrastructure damage in the worst terrorist attack on American soil in history; two of the planes, United Airlines Flight 175 and Flight 11 were crashed into New York City's World Trade Center towers, destroying the entire complex. American Airlines Flight 77 was used in a similar fashion at the Pentagon, in Washington, D.C., which caused the destruction of a portion of the building. They are the three most deadly of all aircraft hijackings. In the case of United 93, the intention was likely the same but the passengers, learning of the fate of the other three planes, attacked the cockpit, causing the hijackers to crash the plane in rural Pennsylvania, killing all on board.
  • Turkey 2006: Turkish Airlines Flight 1476, flying from Tirana to Istanbul, was hijacked in Greek airspace. The aircraft, with 107 passengers and six crew on board, transmitted two coded hijack signals which were picked up by the Greek air force.
  • Russia 2007: an Aeroflot Airbus A320 flying from Moscow to Geneva was hijacked by a drunk man in Prague. The crew and passengers were released after his arrest by the Czech police.
  • Mauritania 2007: An Air Mauritanie Boeing 737 flying from Nouakchott to Las Palmas with 87 passengers on board was hijacked by a man who wanted to fly to Paris, but the plane landed in an air base near Las Palmas and the hijacker, a Moroccan, was arrested.
  • Cuba 2007: Cuban military deserters hijacked a bus, then used it to get into an airport's terminal, where they failed to hijack an aircraft en-route to the United States. One military commander was killed.
  • Cyprus 2007: an Atlasjet MD-80 en route from Nicosia to Istanbul was hijacked by two Arab students, who said they were Al Qaeda operatives, one trained in Afghanistan, and wanted to go to Tehran, Iran. The plane landed in Antalya, the passengers escaped and the hijackers were arrested.[20]
  • Turkey 2011: Turkish Airlines Flight 1754, flying from Oslo, Norway to Istanbul, was in Bulgarian airspace when an unsuccessful attempt was made to hijack it. The hijacker said that he had a bomb and that he would blow up the aircraft unless the plane returned to Norway. Passengers overpowered the hijacker and the flight safely landed at Atatürk International Airport, Istanbul. There were no injuries and the suspect was arrested.[21]

Notes

  1. Roy Olmstead, Historylink. Retrieved June 14, 2007.
  2. Driver Magazine, Carjacking. Retrieved May 30, 2007.
  3. B. Raman, Air China pilot hijacks his own jet to Taiwan CNN. (1998). Retrieved January 25, 2007.
  4. BBC, On this day. Retrieved June 9, 2007.
  5. Dutch News, Moluccans remember train hijack. Retrieved June 14, 2007.
  6. Institute of Peace & Conflict Studies, Hijacking Train: The New Face of Red Terror. Retrieved June 14, 2007.
  7. Sami Shubber, "Aircraft Hijacking under the Hague Convention 1970: A New Regime?" The International and Comparative Law Quarterly, Vol. 22, No. 4. (Oct., 1973): 687-726.
  8. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft.
  9. Gadgetopia, The Truth About Explosive Decompression. Retrieved May 30, 2007.
  10. BBC, US pilots train shooting civilian planes. Retrieved May 30, 2007.
  11. BBC, Poland to down hijacked aircraft, January 13, 2005. Retrieved May 30, 2007.
  12. BBC, "India adopts tough hijack policy", August 14, 2005. Retrieved July 26, 2011.
  13. Permissibility of shooting down a passenger aircraft in the event of a danger that it has been used for unlawful acts, and where state security is threatened, Judgement of 30th September 2008, K 44/07. Retrieved July 26, 2011.
  14. Planecrashinfo.com, Accident details. Retrieved May 30, 2007.
  15. Yossi Melman, "Setting the record straight: Entebbe was not Auschwitz", Haaretz.com, July 8, 20011. Retrieved July 26, 2011.
  16. Robert Verkaik, "Revealed: the fate of Idi Amin's hijack victim", The Independent February 13, 2007. Retrieved July 26, 2011.
  17. Christopher S. Stewart, Nikola Kavaja: Interview with an Assassin. Retrieved December 10, 2006.
  18. Aviation Safety Network, Hijacking. Retrieved May 30, 2007.
  19. BBC, History of airliner hijackings. Retrieved May 30, 2007.
  20. Sebnem Arsu, "Pilots and passengers foil hijacking of Turkish jet", The New York Times, August 19, 2007. Retrieved July 26, 2011.
  21. "Turkish Airlines hijack attempt foiled by passengers", Hürriyet Daily News, January 5, 2011. Retrieved July 26, 2011.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Baker, David. Hijacking And Security. Rourke Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1595154884
  • de B. Taillon, J. Paul. Hijacking and Hostages: Government Responses to Terrorism. Praeger Publishers, 2002. ISBN 0275974685
  • Raab, David. Terror in Black September: The First Eyewitness Account of the Infamous 1970 Hijackings. Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. ISBN 978-1403984203
  • Stevenson, William. 90 minutes at Entebbe. Bantam Books, 1976. ISBN 978-0553104820

External links

All links retrieved December 24, 2017.


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