Hijack man mistook cockpit for toilet
THE Australian man who sparked a hijack alert on a flight to Bali on Friday has denied being drunk and claimed he banged on the door of the cockpit after mistaking it for the toilet, Indonesian police said yesterday.
Matt Christopher Lockley also said he was in a state of depression during the Virgin Australia flight to the resort island, as he was searching for his Indonesian wife with whom he had lost contact, they said.
Security forces rushed to the airport on the Indonesian island when the Boeing 737-800 from Brisbane touched down following a report from the pilot of a hijacking attempt after a passenger started thumping on the cockpit door.
Lockley, wearing flip-flops, white shorts and a T-shirt, was dragged off the plane by heavily armed air force personnel and arrested by police. The alert prompted a shutdown of the airport and the diversion of several flights.
Indonesian officials initially said he had been drunk but police said yesterday that the 28-year- old, who is in custody but has been admitted to hospital suffering from fatigue, denied being under the influence of alcohol.
He told police that before flying he had taken only two pills of Voltaren, four pills of Panadol — both types of painkiller — and drank two bottles of Coca-Cola, Bali police spokesman Hery Wiyanto said.
“According to him, he was not drunk but suffering from depression due to a family problem,” the spokesman said, adding that police were waiting for alcohol test results but there was no smell of drink on his breath when he was detained.
Lockley, from the northeast Australian state of Queensland, said he was on his way to Bali to search for his Indonesian wife, with whom he had lost contact two weeks earlier, the spokesman said.
In his depressed state, Lockley claimed to have been “having hallucinations that somebody had followed him and wanted to steal his bag,” Wiyanto said.
“According to him, he banged on the cockpit door as he thought it was the toilet door.”
Police said earlier that a stewardess said Lockley had asked for medicine before thumping on the cockpit door.
After the incident, crew members handcuffed him and put him in a seat at the back of the plane until it arrived in Bali.
Wiyanto said Lockley could be charged for breaking a passenger safety law, which is punishable by a maximum jail term of two years and a fine of 500 million rupiah (US$43,000).
A spokesman for the Australian embassy in Jakarta said: “We can confirm the arrest of a Queensland man following an incident on board the Virgin airline flight to (Balinese capital) Denpasar.
“The Australian consulate will provide consular assistance as required.”
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