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Man seized for grounding five flights with hoax calls
Police caught a suspect in Changping County, Guangdong Province this morning for making bomb threats to five planes heading for Shenzhen yesterday.
The 26-year-old jobless migrant from Inner Mongolia confessed that he made six hoax calls yesterday. But the motive of this young man, surnamed Wang, was still unclear, Shenzhen police said.
Wang was caught in a rented room at 3:15am this morning, 19 hours after his threat calls forced the five planes of Juneyao, Shenzhen and China Eastern airlines to return to or delay take-off from airports in Shanghai, Beijing, Nanjing, Xi'an and Lanzhou.
Two flights were told to return immediately; two were diverted to other airports; and the fifth one stayed on the ground. All his bomb threats were proven a hoax. Police acted quickly to track down the caller," the Civil Aviation Administration of China said.
Hoax callers face up to five years in prison but the jail term can be extended depending on casualties. The maximum sentence is 15 years for an offender whose action posed serious threat to air safety.
Juneyao Airlines' flight HO1111 from Shanghai to Shenzhen was the first to be affected after a threatening call at around 8:05am shortly after the aircraft had taken off from Hongqiao International Airport.
"The caller's rough meaning was there is a 'suicide bomb' on flight HO1111," said Chen Jiang, director of operations at Hongqiao, yesterday.
The airport immediately initiated an emergency response, sending police officers, firefighters and ambulances to the apron, but the flight had just taken off, Chen said.
The plane was told to turn around at 8:21am and return to Hongqiao where police, fire trucks, explosion proof vehicles and ambulances were all standing by.
"The security guard in plain clothes sitting among passengers on the flight showed his identity shortly after landing and asked all the passengers to remain seated and evacuate gradually," said Lu Zhengqing, a Juneyao duty manager at Hongqiao.
The flight, using another aircraft, took off three hours later after an inspection of all passengers and their luggage.
'Freaked out'
Meanwhile, Shenzhen Airlines flights from Nanjing, Xi'an and Beijing were affected by similar threatening calls before 8:30am.
"I was freaked out because the aircraft suddenly turned back while numerous police cars, fire trucks and even ambulances could be seen waiting on the ground," said a passenger surnamed Yang on the ZH9866 flight from Nanjing in east Jiangsu Province.
The plane was asked to return, while the ZH9243 flight from Xi'an in northwest Shaanxi Province was diverted to the nearest airport in Guilin in south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
The other Shenzhen Airlines flight, ZH9889, had yet to take off at Beijing Capital International Airport.
The fifth flight to be affected was China Eastern's MU2325 from Lanzhou in northwest Gansu Province. A threatening call was received at around 9:30am.
The flight was due to stop over in Xi'an and the call was received shortly before it was due to land there. The aircraft was diverted to another airport in the city and took off again after an inspection, China Eastern said.
Hoax callers face up to five years in jail but the term can be extended in the case of injuries and there is a maximum term of 15 years on callers who pose a serious risk to air safety due to their actions.
In December, police detained a man in central Henan Province on suspicion of making a bomb threat that forced two planes to remain grounded. Last September, a man whose hoax call caused the emergency landing of a Shenzhen Airlines flight was detained in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.
And last July, a Chinese man was sentenced to 14 months in prison in July after calling Pudong International Airport saying he planted a bomb on an Air China flight.
The 26-year-old jobless migrant from Inner Mongolia confessed that he made six hoax calls yesterday. But the motive of this young man, surnamed Wang, was still unclear, Shenzhen police said.
Wang was caught in a rented room at 3:15am this morning, 19 hours after his threat calls forced the five planes of Juneyao, Shenzhen and China Eastern airlines to return to or delay take-off from airports in Shanghai, Beijing, Nanjing, Xi'an and Lanzhou.
Two flights were told to return immediately; two were diverted to other airports; and the fifth one stayed on the ground. All his bomb threats were proven a hoax. Police acted quickly to track down the caller," the Civil Aviation Administration of China said.
Hoax callers face up to five years in prison but the jail term can be extended depending on casualties. The maximum sentence is 15 years for an offender whose action posed serious threat to air safety.
Juneyao Airlines' flight HO1111 from Shanghai to Shenzhen was the first to be affected after a threatening call at around 8:05am shortly after the aircraft had taken off from Hongqiao International Airport.
"The caller's rough meaning was there is a 'suicide bomb' on flight HO1111," said Chen Jiang, director of operations at Hongqiao, yesterday.
The airport immediately initiated an emergency response, sending police officers, firefighters and ambulances to the apron, but the flight had just taken off, Chen said.
The plane was told to turn around at 8:21am and return to Hongqiao where police, fire trucks, explosion proof vehicles and ambulances were all standing by.
"The security guard in plain clothes sitting among passengers on the flight showed his identity shortly after landing and asked all the passengers to remain seated and evacuate gradually," said Lu Zhengqing, a Juneyao duty manager at Hongqiao.
The flight, using another aircraft, took off three hours later after an inspection of all passengers and their luggage.
'Freaked out'
Meanwhile, Shenzhen Airlines flights from Nanjing, Xi'an and Beijing were affected by similar threatening calls before 8:30am.
"I was freaked out because the aircraft suddenly turned back while numerous police cars, fire trucks and even ambulances could be seen waiting on the ground," said a passenger surnamed Yang on the ZH9866 flight from Nanjing in east Jiangsu Province.
The plane was asked to return, while the ZH9243 flight from Xi'an in northwest Shaanxi Province was diverted to the nearest airport in Guilin in south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
The other Shenzhen Airlines flight, ZH9889, had yet to take off at Beijing Capital International Airport.
The fifth flight to be affected was China Eastern's MU2325 from Lanzhou in northwest Gansu Province. A threatening call was received at around 9:30am.
The flight was due to stop over in Xi'an and the call was received shortly before it was due to land there. The aircraft was diverted to another airport in the city and took off again after an inspection, China Eastern said.
Hoax callers face up to five years in jail but the term can be extended in the case of injuries and there is a maximum term of 15 years on callers who pose a serious risk to air safety due to their actions.
In December, police detained a man in central Henan Province on suspicion of making a bomb threat that forced two planes to remain grounded. Last September, a man whose hoax call caused the emergency landing of a Shenzhen Airlines flight was detained in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.
And last July, a Chinese man was sentenced to 14 months in prison in July after calling Pudong International Airport saying he planted a bomb on an Air China flight.
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