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Passenger plane triggers hijack alert, prompting fighter jet scramble
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The Independent World6 g önceالعالم2 dk okuma

Passenger plane triggers hijack alert, prompting fighter jet scramble

نظرة سريعة

  • A LOT Polish Airlines flight carrying 180 passengers from Warsaw to Tel Aviv accidentally triggered a hijack alert, prompting Israel, Bulgaria, and Turkey to scramble fighter jets.
  • The plane landed safely in Bulgaria after a technical failure was identified as the cause.

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لماذا يهم

A LOT Polish Airlines flight accidentally triggered a hijack alert due to a technical failure, leading to fighter jets being scrambled by Israel, Bulgaria, and Turkey. The plane landed safely after the error was identified.

حجم الخط

Israeli forces scrambled a pair of fighter jets on Tuesday to intercept a passenger plane after the pilot accidentally triggered a hijack alert.

The LOT Polish Airlines flight 155, operated by Bulgaria’s Electra Airways, was carrying 180 passengers from Warsaw to Tel Aviv when it transmitted an alert that it had been hijacked.

Bulgaria and Turkey also scrambled aircraft to respond to the serious threat. The Israeli military said the fighter jets had been dispatched due to “lack of contact with the aircraft”, but contact was soon established.

The aircraft landed safely in Bulgaria after the incident.

“The event has ended and contact has been restored with the airplane. There is no concern of a security incident,” the Israel Defence Forces said in a statement.

Bulgaria sent a MiG-29 to intercept the aircraft after it crossed the country’s northern border over the Danube following an alert triggered by Nato’s Air Policing mission over Bulgaria, according to Bulgaria’s public broadcaster BNT.

The passenger plane emitted transponder code 7500, which is used to send a signal of unlawful interference with an aircraft, including hijacking, it said.

Turkey also sent two F-16 fighter jets to accompany the aircraft on its onward route, BNT reported.

The alarm was triggered twice, once it entered Bulgarian airspace and again after it left Turkish airspace.

Bulgaria’s transport ministry blamed “a technical failure of the aircraft’s transponder, which transmitted a false [code 7500] signal of unlawful interference/hijacking”.

LOT spokesperson Krzysztof Moczulski said the incident was caused by a transponder that was incorrectly set, according to Polish state news agency PAP.

Mr Moczulski said Air traffic control later asked the pilot whether the emergency report still stood and the pilot confirmed that the alert was false.

He said it was “most likely [a] human error”, and said an investigation has been launched, calling it an “absolutely exceptional event”.

أسئلة مفتوحة

  • What specific technical failure caused the transponder malfunction?
  • Will there be any repercussions for the airline or crew?
  • What are the protocols for future false alarms?

مواضيع ذات صلة

This article was originally published by The Independent World.

أخبار ذات صلة

المزيد حول هذا الموضوعhijack alert