All 111 passengers freed, 2 ‘Gaddafi loyalists’ arrested

VALLETTA: A picture taken yesterday in Valletta, Malta, shows a crew member helping a group of hostages to disembark from the Afriqiyah Airways A320 after it was hijacked from Libya. —AFP

VALLETTA: Hijackers claiming to have a grenade took over a Libyan plane yesterday and diverted it to Malta before releasing everyone onboard and surrendering to authorities, officials said. “Final crew members leaving aircraft with hijackers,” Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said on Twitter.Television pictures showed two men being led from the aircraft in handcuffs.

The prime tweeted minutes later, “hijackers surrendered, searched and taken into custody.” Libyan Foreign Minister Taher Siala said the two hijackers were supporters of slain dictator Muammar Gaddafi had requested political asylum in Malta. Siala, from Libya’s internationally backed Government of National Accord, said the hijackers have also said they want to set up a pro-Gaddafi political party. The plane landed at 11.32 am (1032 GMT) in Malta. After more than an hour on the tarmac, the door of the Airbus A320 opened and a first group of women and children were seen descending a mobile staircase. Dozens more passengers were released minutes later following negotiations that Maltese government sources said were led by the head of Malta’s military.

In all there were 111 passengers, including 28 women and a baby, on board, as well as seven crew members. Maltese government sources had earlier said only a single hijacker was believed to be on the plane. The aircraft had been on a domestic Libyan route operated by Afriqiyah Airways from Sabha in southern Libya to the capital Tripoli but was re-routed.

Standoff on tarmac

“The Afriqiyah flight from Sabha to Tripoli has been diverted and has landed in Malta. Security services coordinating operations,” Muscat tweeted earlier. MP Hadi Al-Saghir told Reuters that Abdusalem Mrabit, a fellow member of Libya’s House of Representatives on the plane, had told him the two hijackers were in their mid-20s and were from the Tebu ethnic group in southern Libya. Troops were positioned a few hundred metres (yards) from the plane as it stood on the tarmac. Several other flights at the airport were cancelled or diverted.

A senior Libyan security official told Reuters that when the plane was still in flight yesterday morning the pilot told the control tower at Tripoli’s Mitiga airport it had been hijacked. “Then they lost communication with him,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “The pilot tried very hardto have them land at the correct destination but they refused.” The aircraft had been flying from Sebha in southwest Libya to Tripoli for state-owned Afriqiyah Airways, a trip that would usually take a little over two hours.

Libyan airlines banned in Europe

Muscat later spoke to Libya’s prime minister-designate Fayez Al-Sarraj, the head of the north African country’s fledgling unity government, the Maltese prime minister’s office said. The plane could be seen on the tarmac of a secondary runway surrounded by military vehicles. All flights in and out of the airport were initially either delayed or diverted to destinations in Italy, though some later took off and landed.

Malta International Airport said there had been “an unlawful interference” but operations had now resumed. An Afriqiyah Airways source said the two hijackers had threatened the pilots with an explosive device, probably a grenade, forcing them to continue to Malta instead of landing at Tripoli’s Mitiga airport. Libya has been in a state of chaos since the 2011 overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi left warring militias battling for control of different parts of the country. Forces loyal to a national unity government recently took control of the coastal city of Sirte, which had been a bastion for the Islamic State group since June 2015.

Western powers have pinned their hopes of containing jihadism in the energy-rich North African state on the government but it has failed to establish its authority over all of the country. A rival authority rules the country’s far east, backed by the forces under military strongman Marshal Khalifa Haftar who have been battling jihadists in second city Benghazi. Only local airlines-banned from European airspace- operate in Libya, with flights to Tunis, Cairo, Amman, Istanbul and Khartoum. —AFP