Incident Overview

Date: Saturday 27 March 1993
Aircraft Type: Airbus A320-231
Owner/operator: Indian Airlines
Location: Amritsar-Raja Sansi Airport (ATQ) – ÿ India
Phase of Flight: En route
Casualties: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 203
Component Affected: AircraftAircraft
Category: Unlawful Interference
On Indian Airlines Flight 439, a passenger hijacked the aircraft, demanding to be flown to Lahore, Pakistan. After refusal from authorities, the pilot landed at Raja Sansi Airport in India, where the hijacker made three demands: political asylum, a press conference in Islamabad, and an Interpol investigation. The hijacker referred to himself as a ‘human bomb’ and threatened to blow up the plane. Despite a search yielding no explosives, the hijacker surrendered, and all passengers and crew were released. The hijacker concealed a hair dryer containing a device that was later found to be a hair dryer.On Indian Airlines Flight 439, a passenger hijacked the aircraft, demanding to be flown to Lahore, Pakistan. After refusal from authorities, the pilot landed at Raja Sansi Airport in India, where the hijacker made three demands: political asylum, a press conference in Islamabad, and an Interpol investigation. The hijacker referred to himself as a ‘human bomb’ and threatened to blow up the plane. Despite a search yielding no explosives, the hijacker surrendered, and all passengers and crew were released. The hijacker concealed a hair dryer containing a device that was later found to be a hair dryer.

Description

Indian Airlines Flight 439, an Airbus A320 with 192 passengers and 11 crew, was hijacked during a domestic flight from Delhi (DEL) to Madras (MAA) via Hyderabad (HDD). A passenger, who claimed to have explosives strapped to his body, demanded to be flown to Lahore, Pakistan. Because authorities in Lahore refused the aircraft permission to land, however, the pilot went to Raja Sansi Airport in Amritsar, India. There the hijacker made three demands : political asylum for himself in Pakistan, a press conference in Islamabad, and an investigation of the hijacking by Interpol rather than by Indian authorities. Although he set no deadlines, the hijacker referred to himself as a “human bomb ” and threatened to blow up the plane. The hijacker eventually surrendered and all passengers and crew members were released . A search of the aircraft located no explosives. The bomb that the man claimed to have strapped to his body was a hair dryer which he had hidden under his belt.

Primary Cause

Hijacking of an aircraft.Hijacking of an aircraft.

Share on:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *