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Turkish Airlines Flight 1476

Turkish Airlines Flight 1476 (TK1476)[1] was a Turkish Airlines Boeing 737-4Y0 flying from Tirana to Istanbul that was hijacked by Hakan Ekinci in Greek airspace on 3 October 2006. Ekinci demanded to go to Rome to speak with the Pope, but Greek and Italian F-16 Fighting Falcon jets intercepted and escorted the aircraft until it landed in Brindisi, Italy. Nobody was harmed, and Ekinci was jailed in Italy while awaiting trial. At first, the hijacking incident was linked with the envisaged visit of Pope Benedict XVI to Turkey, but later, it was ascertained that Ekinci was seeking to request political asylum from Italy. On 4 October, a Turkish Airlines plane was sent to take the other passengers to Istanbul.

Turkish Airlines Flight 1476
The aircraft involved in the hijacking, photographed in 2003.
Hijacking
Date3 October 2006 (2006-10-03)[1]
SummaryHijacking
SiteHijacked in Greek air space, landed at Brindisi Airport in Italy
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 737-4Y0
OperatorTurkish Airlines
RegistrationTC-JET
Flight originTirana International Airport Nënë Tereza
DestinationAtatürk International Airport
Passengers107 (including hijacker)
Crew6
Fatalities0
Injuries0
Survivors113 (all)

Hijacking edit

 
Planned route from Tirana to Istanbul of the plane is shown with yellow, green is the demanded route from Thessaloniki to Rome by the hijacker, and purple is the actual route to Brindisi.

On 3 October 2006, the Boeing 737-4Y0 took off from Tirana bound for Istanbul. It was hijacked by Hakan Ekinci in Greek airspace at 14:58 UTC and was intercepted and forced by Italian F-16 Fighting Falcon interceptor jets to land at the southern Italian Adriatic port city of Brindisi. There were 113 people on board: 107 passengers and six crew members. At first, it was reported that there were two hijackers,[2] but later, it was confirmed that the sole hijacker lied about the existence of an accomplice.[3]

An official from Greek Ministry of National Defence said the plane had entered Greek air space at 14:58 (UTC).[4] The pilots transmitted the hijack squawk code twice at 14:55 (UTC), while the aircraft was cruising about 25 kilometres (15 mi) north of Thessaloniki.[citation needed] Italian Interior Minister Giuliano Amato reported that the hijacker slipped into the cockpit with a package which could have been a bomb when flight attendants opened the cockpit door, and the pilots acted according to the international rules in the matter and did what the hijacker wanted.[5][6] The flight's captain reported in Istanbul that "while the chief stewardess entered the cockpit to ask if we needed anything, the terrorist entered by force. I tried to push him out but he was a big man and I failed to stop him". The captain went on to say that the hijacker said he had three friends and they had explosives.[7] He wanted to go Rome to speak with the Pope,[6] and Italian Minister of the Interior Giuliano Amato reported that, the hijacker added there are other hijackers on another unspecified plane, "would blow that plane up if the missive didn't get to the pope".[5] Four Greek F-16 fighter jets took off and accompanied the plane until it left Greek airspace. Once in Italian airspace, two Italian F-16s intercepted, escorted, and forced it to land in Brindisi Airport in Brindisi.[8] The airline spokesman said that Greek officials had alerted their Italian counterparts about the hijacking incident.[9]

Passenger accounts edit

Passengers said that the hijacker used no violence. Sabri Abazi, an Albanian member of parliament, who was a passenger on the flight, spoke to ANSA news agency by mobile phone on board. Abazi said that there was one hijacker in the cockpit and another in the cabin, and added that he saw no weapons.[10] Passenger Ergün Erköseoğlu said "I didn't see any suspicious behaviour of the hijacker. Airplane took off and after 20 minutes later, captain announced that due to technical malfunction we would land in Italy instead of Istanbul".[6] Aviation authorities said that after all the passengers had left the plane, police questioned the hijacker. Abazi said that he saw only one hijacker but had been told by a flight attendant that there were two hijackers on board.[10] Istanbul Governor Muammer Güler reported that the hijacker Ekinci lied to the airliner's pilots that he had at least one accomplice.[3]

Upon landing edit

Italian police, military, and fire brigade vehicles surrounded the plane and the Italian news agency ANSA reported that police detained both hijackers. Brindisi Police Chief, Salvatore De Paolis, told Reuters "they will request political asylum".[11] In an interview with reporters, a fire rescue official said "The two hijackers want to speak to journalists so they can send a message to the Pope and explain why they did this."[12] Amoto reported that the hijacker wanted to deliver a message for Pope Benedict XVI, but stated he did not have a written letter.[5]

Hijacker Hakan Ekinci's protest took six hours,[13] and after his surrender, the hijacker apologized to the captain and shook his hand; he also apologized to the passengers.[7] CNN Türk reported that there were 107 passengers, 80 of them Albanian and five Turkish.[13]

After the incident, a Tirana airport video was released to Reuters showing Ekinci being checked by security. He was body searched and passed through a metal detector, then removed his belt, sweater, and emptied his pockets, but was cleared to proceed to his flight.[7]

Ekinci was arrested in Italy after interrogation.[14] Turkish Minister of Justice Cemil Çiçek reported that there would not be a direct return request to the Italian Ministry of Justice until the Chief Public Prosecutor's Office and Ministry of Internal Affairs had completed their work on the subject. They then requested the return of Ekinci.[14] Giuseppe Giannuzzi, prosecutor of the hijacking incident, said to The Associated Press in an interview that the hijacker would remain in jail until the end of the trial which would presumably take two years after inception.[15] Giannuzzi charged Ekinci with hijacking and considered other charges like terrorism and kidnapping. Ekinci was sentenced to 3 years and 4 months for hijacking, and was released on September 14, 2009.[16]

Possible motives edit

 
At first, the hijacking was linked with Benedict XVI's envisaged visit, but later it was ascertained that Ekinci wanted to give a letter to the Pope.

Several theories have emerged as to the motives for the hijacking. At first, Turkish media reported police sources as saying the hijacking was in protest against the then envisaged visit of Pope Benedict XVI, who had offended many Muslims with a speech linking the spread of the Islamic faith to violence.[11] But later, it was reported that the hijacker sought political asylum in Italy due to his conscientious objection to serving in the military.[9][11]

At first, Turkish media reported that there were two hijackers, Hakan Ekinci and Mehmet Ertaş, but later it was ascertained that Ekinci was alone and Ertaş was innocent.[17] According to the report of Turkey's Ministry of Justice, first information about hijacking incident were retrieved via Interpol and authorities reported Ertaş's name as hijacker based on Interpol's report but after more investigations it was ascertained that Ertaş was innocent.[17]

Turkish officials reported the hijacker's name as Hakan Ekinci, born in 1978 in Buca,[13] who is known to have written a letter to the Pope in August 2006.[11] He wrote, "I am a Christian and don't want to serve a Muslim army". He also wrote that he had been attending church since 1998.[9] Istanbul Governor Muammer Güler reported that, Ekinci, who has been identified as a Christian convert by the Turkish media and by chief prosecutor Giuseppe Giannuzzi's reporting near Lecce,[2][18] is a conscientious objector Catholic and has dodged his military conscription.[6] He left Istanbul on 6 May 2006 and went to Albania. Turkey's Consulate General in Tirana then filed for his deportation. If he had landed in Turkey, Hakan Ekinci was certain to be interned as a draft-dodger, since the Consulate had reported the order for his deportation to the police at Atatürk International Airport. Authorities had been investigating him since 1 September on the draft-dodging charge.[6]

Pope Benedict XVI visited Ankara, Istanbul, and Ephesus as a guest of the Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer between 28 November and 1 December 2006.[4] Vatican City officials reported that the Pope was informed of the hijacking incident but the preparations for his trip would not be affected.

Passengers' compensation flight edit

Although the hijacker was found to have acted alone, Italian police took statements from passengers and searched the aircraft and baggage for a possible accomplice,[5] and due to this process, passengers stayed in Italy during the night. On 4 October, a Turkish Airlines Boeing 737 was sent from Turkey to bring the passengers back to Istanbul.[14] The plane departed from Brindisi Airport at 4:15 (UTC) and landed in Istanbul at 5:40 (UTC) with 105 passengers, with the exception of the hijacker who had been arrested in Brindisi, and a passenger who wanted to remain in Italy.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2006-10-03.
  2. ^ a b "Only one Turkish hijacker confirmed so far". Reuters. 2006-10-03. Retrieved 2006-10-03.[dead link]
  3. ^ a b "Turkish airliner in hijack drama". BBC. 2006-10-03. Retrieved 2006-10-03.
  4. ^ a b "Turkish hijackers, looking to Pope, give up in Italy". Reuters. 2006-10-03. Retrieved 2006-10-04.[dead link]
  5. ^ a b c d . CNN. 2006-10-04. Archived from the original on 2006-10-25. Retrieved 2006-10-05.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Yolcular kaçırıldıklarını bilmiyordu" (in Turkish). NTV. 2006-10-05. Archived from the original on 2013-01-13. Retrieved 2006-10-05.
  7. ^ a b c . CNN. 2006-10-04. Archived from the original on 2006-11-03. Retrieved 2006-10-07.
  8. ^ "Hijacker demands message to Pope". Msnbc. 2006-10-04. Retrieved 2006-10-04.[dead link]
  9. ^ a b c . CNN. 2006-10-04. Archived from the original on 2006-10-05. Retrieved 2006-10-04.
  10. ^ a b "Hijack victim says saw no arms or violence". Reuters. 2006-10-03. Retrieved 2006-10-03.[dead link]
  11. ^ a b c d "Turkish hijackers, looking to Pope, give up in Italy". Reuters. 2006-10-03. Retrieved 2006-10-03.[dead link]
  12. ^ "Turkish hijackers, looking to Pope, give up in Italy". Reuters. 2006-10-03. Retrieved 2006-10-04.[dead link]
  13. ^ a b c (in Turkish). CNN Türk. 2006-10-03. Archived from the original on 2006-10-04. Retrieved 2006-10-04.
  14. ^ a b c (in Turkish). CNN Türk. 2006-10-04. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2006-10-04.
  15. ^ . ABC News. 2006-10-10. Archived from the original on 2011-06-29. Retrieved 2006-10-21.
  16. ^ "Hava korsanı Ekinci Türkiye'ye dönmek istiyor". CNN TÜRK (in Turkish). 2009-11-03. Retrieved 2023-12-17.
  17. ^ a b "Mehmet Ertaş korsan değil" (in Turkish). NTV. 2006-10-05. Archived from the original on 2013-01-13. Retrieved 2006-10-17.
  18. ^ "Official: Man Who Hijacked Turkish Airliner Seeking Political Asylum". Fox News. 2006-10-03. Retrieved 2006-10-03.

turkish, airlines, flight, 1476, tk1476, turkish, airlines, boeing, flying, from, tirana, istanbul, that, hijacked, hakan, ekinci, greek, airspace, october, 2006, ekinci, demanded, rome, speak, with, pope, greek, italian, fighting, falcon, jets, intercepted, e. Turkish Airlines Flight 1476 TK1476 1 was a Turkish Airlines Boeing 737 4Y0 flying from Tirana to Istanbul that was hijacked by Hakan Ekinci in Greek airspace on 3 October 2006 Ekinci demanded to go to Rome to speak with the Pope but Greek and Italian F 16 Fighting Falcon jets intercepted and escorted the aircraft until it landed in Brindisi Italy Nobody was harmed and Ekinci was jailed in Italy while awaiting trial At first the hijacking incident was linked with the envisaged visit of Pope Benedict XVI to Turkey but later it was ascertained that Ekinci was seeking to request political asylum from Italy On 4 October a Turkish Airlines plane was sent to take the other passengers to Istanbul Turkish Airlines Flight 1476The aircraft involved in the hijacking photographed in 2003 HijackingDate3 October 2006 2006 10 03 1 SummaryHijackingSiteHijacked in Greek air space landed at Brindisi Airport in ItalyAircraftAircraft typeBoeing 737 4Y0OperatorTurkish AirlinesRegistrationTC JETFlight originTirana International Airport Nene TerezaDestinationAtaturk International AirportPassengers107 including hijacker Crew6Fatalities0Injuries0Survivors113 all Contents 1 Hijacking 2 Passenger accounts 3 Upon landing 4 Possible motives 5 Passengers compensation flight 6 ReferencesHijacking edit nbsp Planned route from Tirana to Istanbul of the plane is shown with yellow green is the demanded route from Thessaloniki to Rome by the hijacker and purple is the actual route to Brindisi On 3 October 2006 the Boeing 737 4Y0 took off from Tirana bound for Istanbul It was hijacked by Hakan Ekinci in Greek airspace at 14 58 UTC and was intercepted and forced by Italian F 16 Fighting Falcon interceptor jets to land at the southern Italian Adriatic port city of Brindisi There were 113 people on board 107 passengers and six crew members At first it was reported that there were two hijackers 2 but later it was confirmed that the sole hijacker lied about the existence of an accomplice 3 An official from Greek Ministry of National Defence said the plane had entered Greek air space at 14 58 UTC 4 The pilots transmitted the hijack squawk code twice at 14 55 UTC while the aircraft was cruising about 25 kilometres 15 mi north of Thessaloniki citation needed Italian Interior Minister Giuliano Amato reported that the hijacker slipped into the cockpit with a package which could have been a bomb when flight attendants opened the cockpit door and the pilots acted according to the international rules in the matter and did what the hijacker wanted 5 6 The flight s captain reported in Istanbul that while the chief stewardess entered the cockpit to ask if we needed anything the terrorist entered by force I tried to push him out but he was a big man and I failed to stop him The captain went on to say that the hijacker said he had three friends and they had explosives 7 He wanted to go Rome to speak with the Pope 6 and Italian Minister of the Interior Giuliano Amato reported that the hijacker added there are other hijackers on another unspecified plane would blow that plane up if the missive didn t get to the pope 5 Four Greek F 16 fighter jets took off and accompanied the plane until it left Greek airspace Once in Italian airspace two Italian F 16s intercepted escorted and forced it to land in Brindisi Airport in Brindisi 8 The airline spokesman said that Greek officials had alerted their Italian counterparts about the hijacking incident 9 Passenger accounts editPassengers said that the hijacker used no violence Sabri Abazi an Albanian member of parliament who was a passenger on the flight spoke to ANSA news agency by mobile phone on board Abazi said that there was one hijacker in the cockpit and another in the cabin and added that he saw no weapons 10 Passenger Ergun Erkoseoglu said I didn t see any suspicious behaviour of the hijacker Airplane took off and after 20 minutes later captain announced that due to technical malfunction we would land in Italy instead of Istanbul 6 Aviation authorities said that after all the passengers had left the plane police questioned the hijacker Abazi said that he saw only one hijacker but had been told by a flight attendant that there were two hijackers on board 10 Istanbul Governor Muammer Guler reported that the hijacker Ekinci lied to the airliner s pilots that he had at least one accomplice 3 Upon landing editItalian police military and fire brigade vehicles surrounded the plane and the Italian news agency ANSA reported that police detained both hijackers Brindisi Police Chief Salvatore De Paolis told Reuters they will request political asylum 11 In an interview with reporters a fire rescue official said The two hijackers want to speak to journalists so they can send a message to the Pope and explain why they did this 12 Amoto reported that the hijacker wanted to deliver a message for Pope Benedict XVI but stated he did not have a written letter 5 Hijacker Hakan Ekinci s protest took six hours 13 and after his surrender the hijacker apologized to the captain and shook his hand he also apologized to the passengers 7 CNN Turk reported that there were 107 passengers 80 of them Albanian and five Turkish 13 After the incident a Tirana airport video was released to Reuters showing Ekinci being checked by security He was body searched and passed through a metal detector then removed his belt sweater and emptied his pockets but was cleared to proceed to his flight 7 Ekinci was arrested in Italy after interrogation 14 Turkish Minister of Justice Cemil Cicek reported that there would not be a direct return request to the Italian Ministry of Justice until the Chief Public Prosecutor s Office and Ministry of Internal Affairs had completed their work on the subject They then requested the return of Ekinci 14 Giuseppe Giannuzzi prosecutor of the hijacking incident said to The Associated Press in an interview that the hijacker would remain in jail until the end of the trial which would presumably take two years after inception 15 Giannuzzi charged Ekinci with hijacking and considered other charges like terrorism and kidnapping Ekinci was sentenced to 3 years and 4 months for hijacking and was released on September 14 2009 16 Possible motives edit nbsp At first the hijacking was linked with Benedict XVI s envisaged visit but later it was ascertained that Ekinci wanted to give a letter to the Pope Several theories have emerged as to the motives for the hijacking At first Turkish media reported police sources as saying the hijacking was in protest against the then envisaged visit of Pope Benedict XVI who had offended many Muslims with a speech linking the spread of the Islamic faith to violence 11 But later it was reported that the hijacker sought political asylum in Italy due to his conscientious objection to serving in the military 9 11 At first Turkish media reported that there were two hijackers Hakan Ekinci and Mehmet Ertas but later it was ascertained that Ekinci was alone and Ertas was innocent 17 According to the report of Turkey s Ministry of Justice first information about hijacking incident were retrieved via Interpol and authorities reported Ertas s name as hijacker based on Interpol s report but after more investigations it was ascertained that Ertas was innocent 17 Turkish officials reported the hijacker s name as Hakan Ekinci born in 1978 in Buca 13 who is known to have written a letter to the Pope in August 2006 11 He wrote I am a Christian and don t want to serve a Muslim army He also wrote that he had been attending church since 1998 9 Istanbul Governor Muammer Guler reported that Ekinci who has been identified as a Christian convert by the Turkish media and by chief prosecutor Giuseppe Giannuzzi s reporting near Lecce 2 18 is a conscientious objector Catholic and has dodged his military conscription 6 He left Istanbul on 6 May 2006 and went to Albania Turkey s Consulate General in Tirana then filed for his deportation If he had landed in Turkey Hakan Ekinci was certain to be interned as a draft dodger since the Consulate had reported the order for his deportation to the police at Ataturk International Airport Authorities had been investigating him since 1 September on the draft dodging charge 6 Pope Benedict XVI visited Ankara Istanbul and Ephesus as a guest of the Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer between 28 November and 1 December 2006 4 Vatican City officials reported that the Pope was informed of the hijacking incident but the preparations for his trip would not be affected Passengers compensation flight editAlthough the hijacker was found to have acted alone Italian police took statements from passengers and searched the aircraft and baggage for a possible accomplice 5 and due to this process passengers stayed in Italy during the night On 4 October a Turkish Airlines Boeing 737 was sent from Turkey to bring the passengers back to Istanbul 14 The plane departed from Brindisi Airport at 4 15 UTC and landed in Istanbul at 5 40 UTC with 105 passengers with the exception of the hijacker who had been arrested in Brindisi and a passenger who wanted to remain in Italy 6 References edit nbsp Wikinews has related news Hijackers with message for Pope seize Turkish airliner a b Detayli Ucus Bilgisi in Turkish Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2006 10 03 a b Only one Turkish hijacker confirmed so far Reuters 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2006 10 03 dead link a b Turkish airliner in hijack drama BBC 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2006 10 03 a b Turkish hijackers looking to Pope give up in Italy Reuters 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2006 10 04 dead link a b c d Turkey Pope safe despite hijack CNN 2006 10 04 Archived from the original on 2006 10 25 Retrieved 2006 10 05 a b c d e f Yolcular kacirildiklarini bilmiyordu in Turkish NTV 2006 10 05 Archived from the original on 2013 01 13 Retrieved 2006 10 05 a b c Hijacker threatened to blow up jet CNN 2006 10 04 Archived from the original on 2006 11 03 Retrieved 2006 10 07 Hijacker demands message to Pope Msnbc 2006 10 04 Retrieved 2006 10 04 dead link a b c Officers question Turkish hijacker CNN 2006 10 04 Archived from the original on 2006 10 05 Retrieved 2006 10 04 a b Hijack victim says saw no arms or violence Reuters 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2006 10 03 dead link a b c d Turkish hijackers looking to Pope give up in Italy Reuters 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2006 10 03 dead link Turkish hijackers looking to Pope give up in Italy Reuters 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2006 10 04 dead link a b c Tiran dan gelen THY ucagi kacirildi in Turkish CNN Turk 2006 10 03 Archived from the original on 2006 10 04 Retrieved 2006 10 04 a b c Mehmet Ertas in olayla ilgisi yok in Turkish CNN Turk 2006 10 04 Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Retrieved 2006 10 04 Plane Hijacking Probe Said to Take Years ABC News 2006 10 10 Archived from the original on 2011 06 29 Retrieved 2006 10 21 Hava korsani Ekinci Turkiye ye donmek istiyor CNN TURK in Turkish 2009 11 03 Retrieved 2023 12 17 a b Mehmet Ertas korsan degil in Turkish NTV 2006 10 05 Archived from the original on 2013 01 13 Retrieved 2006 10 17 Official Man Who Hijacked Turkish Airliner Seeking Political Asylum Fox News 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2006 10 03 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turkish Airlines Flight 1476 amp oldid 1217263651, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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