The co-pilot exited
by scaling down a rope he threw out of the cockpit window and walked to police,
where he was arrested. The flight was
escorted by Italian Eurofighter and French Mirage fighter jets while traversing
their respective airspaces. Now the
person is convicted in absentia of hijacking his own plane and flying it to
Geneva, 13 months after he surrendered to police there and sought asylum.
The
high court in Addis Ababa issued its ruling recently and said it would sentence
Hailemedhin Abera Tegegn. If he ever returns to his home country he could face
up to 20 years in jail. Earlier, Swiss
police have said Hailemedhin asked for asylum because he did not feel safe in
Ethiopia.
Opposition
politicians and rights campaigners often accuse the government of stifling
dissent, a charge dismissed by the government. Authorities say there have been
growing numbers of people from north and east Africa traveling to Europe to
flee poverty and conflicts - though Hailemedhin left behind a well-paid job on
the flagship airline in one of Africa's fastest-growing economies. Ethiopian
officials said at the time Addis Ababa may ask for his extradition. There were
no details on his current whereabouts.
Almost
two decades earlier, another Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961, a Boeing 767-200ER,
was hijacked on 23 November 1996, en route from Addis Ababa to Nairobi, by
three Ethiopians seeking asylum in Australia. . Over the intercom, they declared in Amharic,
French and English that if anyone tried to interfere, they had a bomb and they
would use it to blow up the plane. The plane crash-landed in the Indian Ocean
near Grande Comore, Comoros Islands, due to fuel exhaustion; 125 of the 175
passengers and crew on board died, along with the hijackers. The incident is one of the only documented
water landing attempts of a widebody airliner with survivors. Prior to Sept 11 incident, it was the deadliest hijacking involving a
single aircraft, and the second deadliest hijacking after the 1990 Guangzhou
Baiyun airport collisions. Some reports
suggested that death of passengers could have been due to inflating their life
jackets in the cabin, causing them to be trapped by rising water which led to
future notices about not inflating the vests before exiting the plane !!
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
18th Mar 2015.
