Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

After the EgyptAir crisis in Cyprus, how can a plane be hijacked in the 21st Century?

Simon Calder explains the decisions behind landing a plane at the demand of an unruly passenger

Simon Calder
Travel Correspondent
Tuesday 29 March 2016 15:17 BST
Comments
(EPA)

Somewhere in the world, almost every day,a foolish, drunk or angry passenger will claim to have a weapon on board a plane. In many cases she or (usually) he will not be believed, and can be expected a welcoming committee of police upon arrival.

If there is a degree of plausibility, then the captain may decide to divert to the nearest airport – normally with the same result, but rather more disruption.

For someone with a convincing story but no actual weapon effectively to take control of an aircraft on a domestic flight and direct it to land in another country is, thankfully, rare. But the incident aboard flight 181 from Alexandria to Cairo says much about the tension prevailing in Egypt and beyond.

When the EgyptAir pilots were alerted by cabin crew to the threat, they will have had in mind the Metrojet holiday flight from Sharm el-Sheikh to St Petersburg on 31 October. An Airbus crashed in the Sinai desert with the loss of all 224 people on board. It is believed to have been downed by a bomb planted while the plane was on the ground at the resort’s airport.

A few days later, the Foreign Office banned airlines from flying in and out of Sharm el-Sheikh until airport security was improved – and mounted an unprecedented series of rescue flights on which passengers were banned from taking luggage, which was flown home separately. Egypt’s prime holiday airport is still off limits to UK airlines.

Every EgyptAir captain is acutely aware the apparent circumstances of the Metrojet tragedy. If the price of keeping passengers and crew safe appears merely to be a short diversion to a nearby island, it is the only rational course of action. But to the wider world, it adds to the sense that the Egyptian authorities are not fully in control of security – especially in that most sensitive area, the airport.

While I have flown many times on EgyptAir and would not hesitate to do so again tomorrow, I sympathise with prospective travellers who feel uneasy about the very idea of flying from an Egyptian airport. And I fear some other misguided souls will be encouraged by the apparent "success" of a hijacking using a 21st-century variant on a toy gun. Even if your travel plans do not include Egypt, be prepared: a well-publicised hijack triggers copy-cat incidents.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in