Happening Now - Ethiopian Airlines flight bound for Rome hijacked

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Ethiopian Airlines co-pilot hijacks plane to seek Geneva asylum

The co-pilot of an Ethiopian Airlines plane flying from Addis Ababa to Rome has hijacked the aircraft and landed in Geneva, Swiss police say.


The hijacker - who has been arrested - waited for the pilot to go to the toilet to lock himself in the cockpit. He was unarmed. He has requested asylum in Switzerland.


The airline said in a statement that all 202 passengers and crew were safe.

Geneva airport, which was closed for a time, has now reopened.

Continue reading the main story
Analysis
_72059596_emmanueligunza.jpg
Emmanuel Igunza BBC News
Such high-profile incidents of political asylum-seeking are uncommon in Ethiopia.

But dozens of members of a rebel group, the ONLF, have sought asylum in the West and neighbouring countries over the past decade, fleeing a military counter-insurgency campaign in the Ogaden region bordering Somalia.

Human Rights Watch has accused the Ethiopian government of at times forcibly returning asylum seekers with the help of neighbouring states. The Ethiopian government denies these claims.


Some Ethiopian journalists have also sought political refuge abroad, fleeing anti-terrorism laws - which criminalise comments critical of the government. Dozens have been imprisoned under the laws, including prominent blogger Eskinder Nega, jailed for 18 years.


There are also thousands of Ethiopians who leave the country for economic reasons. Despite having one of the fastest growing economies globally, Ethiopia remains poor with many living on under $2 (£1.20) a day.

An Ethiopian man born in 1983, the co-pilot has sought asylum due to fear of persecution in Ethiopia, police said at a news conference.

After locking himself in the cockpit, he asked to refuel at Geneva, landed the plane, climbed down from the cockpit window using a rope (available in the cockpit), and gave himself up to police.

He was unarmed and there was no risk at any time to crew or passengers, police said.

The situation inside the plane remained calm throughout.

The co-pilot himself alerted the authorities to the plane's hijacking, officials added - and passengers on the plane were unaware it had been hijacked.

The only possible offence the co-pilot could be charged with is that of hostage-taking, for which he could face up to 20 years of imprisonment, a Geneva prosecutor said at the news conference.

Flight 702 was scheduled to leave the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, at 00:30 local time (21:30 GMT), and arrive in Rome at 04:40 local time.

The Boeing 767-300 made an unscheduled landing in the Swiss city at 06:00.

Geneva airport chief executive Robert Deillon says the co-pilot handed himself over to police

The evacuation of passengers began at about 07:25; they were all searched twice and have been questioned by police.

The hijacking began over Italy, and two fighter jets - probably Italian - were scrambled to accompany the plane, Geneva airport chief executive Robert Deillon said at the news conference.

Police evacuate passengers from the plane
Passengers were escorted one by one into a waiting bus
This incident is a blow to Ethiopia Airlines, which has long prided itself as one of the continent's best performing carriers, says BBC Addis Ababa correspondent Emmanuel Igunza.

It reported $143m in operating profit in the last financial year. Other carriers recorded reduced profit margins or losses due to a combination of high fuel prices and the global economic recession, our correspondent adds.

The last hijacking to take place at Geneva airport was that of an Air Afrique plane in 1985.

In 1996, an Ethiopian Airlines flight was hijacked by three Ethiopians who wanted to claim asylum in Australia. It ran out of fuel and crashed into the Indian Ocean near the Comoros islands, killing 125 of the 175 people on board.
 

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Ethiopian Airlines co-pilot hijacks plane to seek Geneva asylum
The co-pilot of an Ethiopian Airlines plane flying from Addis Ababa to Rome has hijacked the aircraft and landed in Geneva, Swiss police say.

The hijacker - who has been arrested - waited for the pilot to go to the toilet to lock himself in the cockpit. He was unarmed. He has requested asylum in Switzerland.


The airline said in a statement that all 202 passengers and crew were safe.

Geneva airport, which was closed for a time, has now reopened.

Continue reading the main story
Analysis
_72059596_emmanueligunza.jpg
Emmanuel Igunza BBC News
Such high-profile incidents of political asylum-seeking are uncommon in Ethiopia.

But dozens of members of a rebel group, the ONLF, have sought asylum in the West and neighbouring countries over the past decade, fleeing a military counter-insurgency campaign in the Ogaden region bordering Somalia.

Human Rights Watch has accused the Ethiopian government of at times forcibly returning asylum seekers with the help of neighbouring states. The Ethiopian government denies these claims.

Some Ethiopian journalists have also sought political refuge abroad, fleeing anti-terrorism laws - which criminalise comments critical of the government. Dozens have been imprisoned under the laws, including prominent blogger Eskinder Nega, jailed for 18 years.


There are also thousands of Ethiopians who leave the country for economic reasons. Despite having one of the fastest growing economies globally, Ethiopia remains poor with many living on under $2 (£1.20) a day.

An Ethiopian man born in 1983, the co-pilot has sought asylum due to fear of persecution in Ethiopia, police said at a news conference.

After locking himself in the cockpit, he asked to refuel at Geneva, landed the plane, climbed down from the cockpit window using a rope (available in the cockpit), and gave himself up to police.

He was unarmed and there was no risk at any time to crew or passengers, police said.

The situation inside the plane remained calm throughout.

The co-pilot himself alerted the authorities to the plane's hijacking, officials added - and passengers on the plane were unaware it had been hijacked.

The only possible offence the co-pilot could be charged with is that of hostage-taking, for which he could face up to 20 years of imprisonment, a Geneva prosecutor said at the news conference.

Flight 702 was scheduled to leave the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, at 00:30 local time (21:30 GMT), and arrive in Rome at 04:40 local time.

The Boeing 767-300 made an unscheduled landing in the Swiss city at 06:00.

Geneva airport chief executive Robert Deillon says the co-pilot handed himself over to police

The evacuation of passengers began at about 07:25; they were all searched twice and have been questioned by police.

The hijacking began over Italy, and two fighter jets - probably Italian - were scrambled to accompany the plane, Geneva airport chief executive Robert Deillon said at the news conference.

Police evacuate passengers from the plane
Passengers were escorted one by one into a waiting bus
This incident is a blow to Ethiopia Airlines, which has long prided itself as one of the continent's best performing carriers, says BBC Addis Ababa correspondent Emmanuel Igunza.

It reported $143m in operating profit in the last financial year. Other carriers recorded reduced profit margins or losses due to a combination of high fuel prices and the global economic recession, our correspondent adds.

The last hijacking to take place at Geneva airport was that of an Air Afrique plane in 1985.

In 1996, an Ethiopian Airlines flight was hijacked by three Ethiopians who wanted to claim asylum in Australia. It ran out of fuel and crashed into the Indian Ocean near the Comoros islands, killing 125 of the 175 people on board.

I'm sayin, they coulda did this way more slick than they did. The Horn so fukked up, these jerks won't even acknowledge the past at all but got Meles picture plastered all over Addis Abeba like he's on a Menelik or Haile Selassie type of level. I won't knock the govt completely they've done some good but on the whole I totally disagree with their style of politics dividing everyone up instead of promoting unity. Not to mention, the regime isn't friendly with media unless it conforms to their ideology. Outsiders continue to keep the region in madness, Ethiopia real calm about it but I've always felt weary on where this country would go next time elections are held. These are after all the same jerks that opened fire on their own citizens during a protest in 2005. :ld:
 

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I'm sayin, they coulda did this way more slick than they did. The Horn so fukked up, these jerks won't even acknowledge the past at all but got Meles picture plastered all over Addis Abeba like he's on a Menelik or Haile Selassie type of level. I won't knock the govt completely they've done some good but on the whole I totally disagree with their style of politics dividing everyone up instead of promoting unity. Not to mention, the regime isn't friendly with media unless it conforms to their ideology. Outsiders continue to keep the region in madness, Ethiopia real calm about it but I've always felt weary on where this country would go next time elections are held. These are after all the same jerks that opened fire on their own citizens during a protest in 2005. :ld:

That's why I'm not into politics like that breh, I just can't stand the hypocrisy and the blatant disrespect/non-caring approach our countries have for the people.

About Haile Selassie, how much do the people admire him in Ethiopia and for what reasons?
 
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That's why I'm not into politics like that breh, I just can't stand the hypocrisy and the blatant disrespect/non-caring approach our countries have for the people.

About Haile Selassie, how much do the people admiring him in Ethiopia and for what reasons?

I really don't blame you cuz it's sickening. I picked up on it early tho cuz my dad a news addict. My best friend is Eritrean and I used to bring up the issue when I'd go to his crib and his mom would always tell me I ain't know shyt and leave politics alone. At first I ain't understand but when I grew up I realized what she was doing, politics tends to fukk up our relationships all over the region. Still I can't help it, I want the region to fix itself up so unfortunately for me I read this kinda shyt so I can understand but its with a heavy heart mostly cuz its the people that continue to get screwed because of a few people. :to:

As for Haile, it depends on who tbh. My parents and step-dad LOVE the man because for them that was when they grew up and things were good for them, my mom in particular is very nostalgic about those times because of all the American culture that came in during the time and the worth of the Birr in those days. Plus in contrast the dead bodies at your doorstep, midnight curfew, force you to give up all your possessions approach of the Derg made Haile look all the better in the end. My immediate fam is neutral on the new govt mostly but do like all the infrastructure projects. From my sense of it of goin there, most city folks have a good opinion of him but it's only discussed in private. The people that suffered by his negligence or stubbornness don't like him as much, mostly non-Habesha tribes and some Muslim groups. So yeah, it depends on who and where they come from in the country. Oromos don't really like him or Menelik all too much, despite them having some Oromo ancestry because of an overall prejudice against Habeshas. So if your Habesha/pro-Habesha, Amhara, or had money during that time then chances are you have a positive opinion, anyone else and they don't fukk wit em that much.

What's weird is now Amharas here in DC for example look at the new govt as some Tigrayan goon squad committing acts of genocide, selling the country to foreigners, and destroying the efforts of the last two rulers who were Amharas just to spite them all as a tribe. I can kinda see their argument, only because Menelik's decision to sell off what would become Eritrea was to undercut the heir Ras Mengesha after Yohannes IV death against the Mahdists. So I think the things that those rulers did to Eritreans and the way Wollo and Tigray went through hell during the famine fuels their perception. I don't really buy that much cuz to me if that were the case Meles and Isaias prolly would of just took the whole country and ruled it from Asmara or would've just united the rest of Tigray and parts of Afar with Eritrea and said fukk the rest. However, quite a few curious things happened in these decades since '91 that keeps Amharas suspicious.

It's tricky really cuz a lot of factors play into that opinion plus its hard to be frank in that country you can sense the uneasiness, but images having to do with Haile Selassie or the Imperial family are banned in the country. That's why Meles face is plastered all over the capitol as if he's some deity. They didn't destroy monuments or relics/artifacts thankfully but you only find Selassie or Menelik in history class/books or old monuments. Only place you can find an old Lion of Judah flag is at the airport duty free or in Shashamane and Shash is only cuz of the Rastas that live there. Most folks like my parents and relatives take him in context, they realize that dude made mistakes.
 

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I really don't blame you cuz it's sickening. I picked up on it early tho cuz my dad a news addict. My best friend is Eritrean and I used to bring up the issue when I'd go to his crib and his mom would always tell me I ain't know shyt and leave politics alone. At first I ain't understand but when I grew up I realized what she was doing, politics tends to fukk up our relationships all over the region. Still I can't help it, I want the region to fix itself up so unfortunately for me I read this kinda shyt so I can understand but its with a heavy heart mostly cuz its the people that continue to get screwed because of a few people. :to:

As for Haile, it depends on who tbh. My parents and step-dad LOVE the man because for them that was when they grew up and things were good for them, my mom in particular is very nostalgic about those times because of all the American culture that came in during the time and the worth of the Birr in those days. Plus in contrast the dead bodies at your doorstep, midnight curfew, force you to give up all your possessions approach of the Derg made Haile look all the better in the end. My immediate fam is neutral on the new govt mostly but do like all the infrastructure projects. From my sense of it of goin there, most city folks have a good opinion of him but it's only discussed in private. The people that suffered by his negligence or stubbornness don't like him as much, mostly non-Habesha tribes and some Muslim groups. So yeah, it depends on who and where they come from in the country. Oromos don't really like him or Menelik all too much, despite them having some Oromo ancestry because of an overall prejudice against Habeshas. So if your Habesha/pro-Habesha, Amhara, or had money during that time then chances are you have a positive opinion, anyone else and they don't fukk wit em that much.

What's weird is now Amharas here in DC for example look at the new govt as some Tigrayan goon squad committing acts of genocide, selling the country to foreigners, and destroying the efforts of the last two rulers who were Amharas just to spite them all as a tribe. I can kinda see their argument, only because Menelik's decision to sell off what would become Eritrea was to undercut the heir Ras Mengesha after Yohannes IV death against the Mahdists. So I think the things that those rulers did to Eritreans and the way Wollo and Tigray went through hell during the famine fuels their perception. I don't really buy that much cuz to me if that were the case Meles and Isaias prolly would of just took the whole country and ruled it from Asmara or would've just united the rest of Tigray and parts of Afar with Eritrea and said fukk the rest. However, quite a few curious things happened in these decades since '91 that keeps Amharas suspicious.

It's tricky really cuz a lot of factors play into that opinion plus its hard to be frank in that country you can sense the uneasiness, but images having to do with Haile Selassie or the Imperial family are banned in the country. That's why Meles face is plastered all over the capitol as if he's some deity. They didn't destroy monuments or relics/artifacts thankfully but you only find Selassie or Menelik in history class/books or old monuments. Only place you can find an old Lion of Judah flag is at the airport duty free or in Shashamane and Shash is only cuz of the Rastas that live there. Most folks like my parents and relatives take him in context, they realize that dude made mistakes.

I definitely educate myself on current events and the underlying issues since it brings a "completeness" to whatever opinion I hold, but that's it. I hate discussing politics and barely join any conversations on it.. it's just full of games and diminishes the importance of the issue at hand since you have to think of alliances, "political correctness", and all other bullshyt that's vital to take a stance in a discussion. shyt like that is childish to me.

:ehh: I didn't know that. Pretty interesting to hear about the conflicted outlook on Selassie's legacy within the country. I always learned about him through the Eritrean perspective and the westernized/Jamaican version...
 

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I definitely educate myself on current events and the underlying issues since it brings a "completeness" to whatever opinion I hold, but that's it. I hate discussing politics and barely join any conversations on it.. it's just full of games and diminishes the importance of the issue at hand since you have to think of alliances, "political correctness", and all other bullshyt that's vital to take a stance in a discussion. shyt like that is childish to me.

:ehh: I didn't know that. Pretty interesting to hear about the conflicted outlook on Selassie's legacy within the country. I always learned about him through the Eritrean perspective and the westernized/Jamaican version...

You'd hate it in DC, everything is politics. It's weird, cuz in LA it seems like Eris/Ethis are more united together but separate from AAs whereas in DC they're more separate from each other but more inclined to interact with AAs.(Eri's much moreso than Ethis tho). People are extremely touchy out here, lol one Eritrean will be like "Man fukk that shyt, we the same people." :blessed: and the next would be like "fukk you, we are not at all the same." :birdman: you don't know how confusing it is, and my background is tribally mixed so I just be like :wtf: lookin at Eritrean uncles and aunts like "We cool?" :unsure:

It really is nothing more than games, these people literally play games on the lives of millions. It's propaganda on all fronts, I've lurked political forums for Eris/Oromos/Somalis/Habesha Ethiopians and its all fukk shyt to me. Politics has aggravated past issues and got us on opposite sides rather than united in some way. I'm on some regional shyt, all of us should be united and using our resources to lift the people out of poverty. I doubt anyone would agree with me, but creating divisions hasn't helped any of the people. The levels of poverty I've seen in Ethiopia fukks me up and I know it's the same in Eritrea.

Yeah, I'm still learning a lot about Selassie. Dude went out tragically but he made mistakes truthfully, he didn't have a very cooperative political environment to work with but still he got more interested in his image rather than the progressive ideas that brought him to power. My uncle was Rasta when I was a little kid so that combined with my parents nostalgia gave me one view of HIM it wasn't until I learned the Eritrean side of it that I started to have a more balanced view. Admittedly I still have a deep respect for him, but I understand that he coulda been better. Most people that got a problem with Selassie in Ethiopia are staunch TPLF/Derg supporters or the groups that want to split from the country altogether pretty much, the ones that respect or revere him had their best memories during his reign. :ehh:
 

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Wow, this fool did it because his uncle died and he was scared that the govt was gon get him. But his fam is sayin dude been on edge since his uncle died. :snoop:
 
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