Airliner with 58 aboard landed at military base in southern Israel.
Published:
13 November 2000 y., Monday
A Chechen gunman who seized a Russian airliner surrendered to Israeli authorities Sunday and all 58 people on board were safe, a military official said. Army Col. Ofer Ophir said the lone hijacker was in Israeli custody and all the passengers had been removed from the plane.
Israel, Russia and Azerbaijan had said initially that up to four hijackers were on board and were threatening to blow up the plane. But there was only one gunman, who turned over his weapon and surrendered, Israeli authorities said.
The aircraft was directed to a remote landing strip. Initially officials said the hijackers acted in support of the Palestinian uprising, a six-week-old conflict that has claimed nearly 200 lives. But later army spokesman Brig. Gen. Ron Kitrey said that information was incorrect, and that the hijacking was part of the ongoing conflict between Russia and Chechnya, which is predominantly Muslim. Israel initially refused the plane permission to land, and was intent on preventing the plane from landing at Ben-Gurion international airport near Tel Aviv, the country's main airport.
While the plane circled over the Mediterranean Sea, an Israeli Air Force jet flew nearby. Eventually, the plane was allowed to land after the Russian pilot said he was running low on fuel.
The gunman seized the plane Saturday night shortly after takeoff from Makhachkala, the capital of the southern Russian region of Dagestan in the Caucasus Mountains. The jet, with 48 passengers, including two children, and five stewardesses and five cockpit crew, was flying to Moscow from Makhachkala, the Dagestan capital.
Šaltinis:
MSNBC News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Militants in the Philippines have killed a head teacher from this school in Jolo. An official from the army said the man was beheaded.
more »
Ruca is no ordinary police dog. Instead of sniffing out drugs and explosives, he puts his nose to fighting the piracy industry.
more »
Afghans vent their anger on the streets of Kabul. They accuse American troops of burning a copy of Islam's holiest book, the Koran, during a raid in Maidan Wardak province last week.
more »
73% of Europeans consider poverty to be a widespread problem in their country while 89% want urgent action by their government to tackle the problem.
more »
Parliament adopted three urgent resolutions on the need for the EU to impose sanctions further to the violent repression of a demonstration in Guinea Conakry, the abolition of the death penalty in Iran, and access for humanitarian organisations to the 250,000 civilians displaced by the civil war and held in camps in Sri Lanka.
more »
The award ceremony of the Lorenzo Natali Prizes for Journalism took place today during the 2009 European Development Days.
more »
The European Parliament's 2009 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought has been awarded to Russian civil rights defence organization Memorial, and their three representatives Oleg Orlov, Sergei Kovalev and Lyudmila Alexeyeva, as well as all other human rights defenders in Russia.
more »
Taking into account changes on domestic money markets AB DnB NORD Bankas, a member of international financial group shall change individual and corporate time deposit rates from October 22.
more »
Wild birds know no borders, so the conservation of endangered species requires trans-frontier cooperation.
more »
New safety standards for children's sleeping items - including duvets, baby sleeping bags and cot mattresses - which should help to prevent many cot –related accidents, were given a green light today by EU Member States.
more »