2 men arrested after flight from Pakistan diverted in UK airspace
Airline: Unruly passenger diverts plane
A UK fighter jet was
scrambled to escort Pakistan International Airlines Flight PK709 from
Lahore as it was diverted from northwestern England's Manchester Airport
to Stansted.
Essex Police, who cover
the area near Stansted airport, said officers had arrested the men and
removed them from the plane, which had 297 passengers aboard.
Police said the incident is being treated as a criminal offense, and did not mention a terrorism angle.
Wajid Hasan, Pakistan's
High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, told CNN that the two
passengers "got into an altercation with air stewardesses and threatened
to blow up the plane."
The air stewardesses
contacted the pilot, who contacted UK air traffic control authorities,
who then scrambled the fighter jets, he said.
Why was Pakistani airliner diverted?
"So far nothing has been
found," he said. "All the passengers are off the aircraft and are being
screened, as would be normal, by immigration authorities," he said, and
the cargo is also being searched.
The process is expected to take about four hours, he said, after which the passengers will fly on to Manchester.
The commission has sent
officials to Stansted Airport to provide consular assistance to
passengers who need it, a written statement said.
Pakistan International Airlines spokesman Mashood Tajwar said the aircraft would then fly from Manchester to Lahore, Pakistan.
Passengers arriving at Stansted told CNN they were delayed by what several called a "terrorist scare."
'Unruly passenger'
A top official with Pakistan International Airlines earlier said the diversion was prompted by an unruly passenger.
"The passenger was
simply causing a disturbance on the plane and threatening passengers and
staff. This is a lesson to angry passengers," the official said.
Tajwar told CNN that the
plane was 20 minutes away from Manchester Airport and preparing to land
when air traffic controllers there received reports of a "terror
threat."
British police had not
yet been in touch with the airline to confirm if this was actually a
terror threat related to passengers on board the PIA flight, Tajwar
said.
"This information may be a bomb threat but we are not sure yet, it could be a fake threat," Tajwar told CNN.
A security source in
London told CNN that early indications suggested the diversion of the
flight to Stansted Airport was not a terror-related incident.
A representative for
Stansted Airport said the plane was on an isolated stand away from the
normal airport and police were handling the situation.
Typhoon aircraft were launched from RAF Coningsby to investigate the incident, the UK Defense Ministry said.
The Boeing 777 landed at 2:10 p.m. (9:10 a.m. ET).
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