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  • Sudanese plane hijacked

    http://english.aljazeera.net/news/af...854349241.html

    It is becoming a busy week...
    another ADC refugee

  • #2
    LATEST UPDATE -

    A Sudanese plane which was hijacked with over 80 people on board has landed in Libya.
    The plane was hijacked shortly after take off from Nyala, the largest town in the country's war-torn Darfur region.

    The aircraft was diverted to the small military airport in Kufrah, Libya after being refused permission to land in Cairo.

    Three senior members of a former Darfur rebel movement which has signed a peace accord with the government were among the passengers, a spokesman for the group has said.

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    • #3
      Landed in Kufra, but no further news ... http://voanews.com/english/2008-08-26-voa55.cfm

      From what I could gather, this airline has a single 737.
      another ADC refugee

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      • #4
        Pax released, but crew still on board

        Hijackers have released 87 passengers from a Boeing 737 seized on Tuesday shortly after taking off from the Darfur region, but are still holding the eight crew members hostage, the Libyan aviation authority said today.

        The plane, which had been en route to the Sudanese capital of Khartoum, was taken over by suspected Darfur rebels and diverted to a second world war airstrip in Kufra, a remote town in the Libyan Sahara desert.

        Sudan's foreign ministry called the hijacking an "irresponsible terrorist act" and said they wanted the hijackers to be extradited.

        The Kufra airport director, Khaled Sasiya, said he spoke to one of the hijackers, who identified himself as Yassin and said they were from the Sudan Liberation Movement (SLM), led by Abdel Wahid al-Nur. But a spokesman for the movement denied any involvement. Yahia Bolad said the group had "no relation to this act".

        Libyan officials said the passengers were released yesterday. There have been reports the hijackers demanded fuel and maps to fly to Paris.

        Bernard Kouchner, the French foreign minister, told Europe-1 radio that the SLM leader, who lives in Paris, denied he was in contact with the hijackers. "He says he doesn't know these people and that he absolutely refuses to use such methods," Kouchner said. "It's not his way. He's rather a peaceful man."

        The hijacked airliner belonged to a private company, Sun Air, the Sudanese civil aviation authority said in a statement carried by the Sudan Media Centre, which has close links to the government.

        The Kufra airport director said the hijacker he spoke to told him that the poor air-conditioning system on the plane was creating breathing problems and that some passengers had fainted.

        An airpot security official said among the passengers were former rebels who have become members of the Transitional Darfur Regional Authority, an interim government body. The authority is responsible for implementing a peace agreement reached in 2006 between the government and one of the rebel factions.

        There was conflicting information about the hijackers' identities and how many there were.

        A Libyan official at the Kufra airport said on Tuesday that there were 10 hijackers belonging to a Darfur rebel group. The official Sudanese news agency, SUNA, reported Wednesday that Sun Air put the number of the hijackers at four.

        Sudan's consul in Kufra, Mohammed al-Bila Othman, told Suna there were about 500 security and police personnel at the airport as well as ambulances and firefighting vehicles.

        The chief of police of the southern Darfur province, Major General Fathul-Rahamn Othman, told Suna that the hijacking aimed to "destabilise security".

        Darfur's ethnic African rebels have been fighting the Arab-led Khartoum government since 2003 in a conflict the UN says has killed up to 300,000 people and driven 2.5 million from their homes

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Cargo Runner
          ...diverted to a second world war airstrip in Kufra, a remote town in the Libyan Sahara desert...
          I wonder when the press refers to Heathrow, why they don't add the world war II era airfield epithet ? :http://www.airwise.com/airports/europe/LHR/LHR_07.html

          The dual military/civilian Kufra airport in fact has a 3000m + runway (and the parallel taxiway couples as a second runway), by African standards fully equipped (I believe one end even has an ILS), and it is the principal (and practically only) diversion airport for all the flights between East Africa and Europe during the Sahara crossing.
          another ADC refugee

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          • #6
            A busy week indeed...
            sigpic
            http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=170

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            • #7
              Peaceful ending:

              http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5i...x6NTAD92QN7VO0
              another ADC refugee

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