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High drama at Delhi airport following mock hijack
New Delhi, Sept 20: High drama was witnessed at the IGI Airport here today as authorities declared a full emergency and carried out a mock hijack exercise involving an Alliance Air aircraft carrying 127 passengers and eight crew members to check security preparedness.
New Delhi, Sept 20: High drama was witnessed at the IGI Airport here today as authorities declared a full emergency and carried out a mock hijack exercise involving an Alliance Air aircraft carrying 127 passengers and eight crew members to check security preparedness.
The drama unfolded with the pilot of the flight on
Delhi-Raipur-Nagpur-Delhi route, Capt R Mohan, giving a hijack
signal to the control tower in Delhi after the Airbus-320
took off from Nagpur on the last leg of its journey.
A full emergency was sounded at the airport here and as
the aircraft, bearing registration number VT-EYA, landed at
1203 hours, it was surrounded by crack CISF commandos.
Fire tenders and ambulances also took up position nearby.
The air traffic controllers asked the pilot to move the
aircraft to an isolated bay.
The passengers, six crew members and two pilots, were later off-loaded and taken to the arrival terminal after the 45-minute long high drama ended.
Confirming it as a mock exercise, civil aviation secretary K Roy Paul said "we carried out the drill to check the alertness of security forces".
In the given circumstances, such drills were essential to test the alertness and effectiveness of the anti-hijack and anti-fire security measures, he said.
The Bureau of Civil Aviation security had planned out the entire operation beforehand and only few top officials knew about it, Roy Paul said, adding "we cannot alert all concerned when we are carrying out an exercise to test the alertness of the entire system".
The exercise was held to test the security system. Bureau Report
The passengers, six crew members and two pilots, were later off-loaded and taken to the arrival terminal after the 45-minute long high drama ended.
Confirming it as a mock exercise, civil aviation secretary K Roy Paul said "we carried out the drill to check the alertness of security forces".
In the given circumstances, such drills were essential to test the alertness and effectiveness of the anti-hijack and anti-fire security measures, he said.
The Bureau of Civil Aviation security had planned out the entire operation beforehand and only few top officials knew about it, Roy Paul said, adding "we cannot alert all concerned when we are carrying out an exercise to test the alertness of the entire system".
The exercise was held to test the security system. Bureau Report