Air France flight forced to land over fake bomb

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Some of the 459 passengers, who were on board an Air France Boeing 777 aircraft that made an emergency landing after a suspicious device was found in a lavatory, travel by bus to their hotels from Moi International Airport in Kenya's coastal city of Mombasa yesterday.

A suspicious device discovered in the bathroom of an Air France flight yesterday was a hoax, its chief executive said.

The Boeing 777 was heading to Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris from Mauritius when its pilots requested an emergency landing early yesterday at Kenya’s coastal city of Mombasa.

The device was made of cardboard, paper and a household timer, said Frederic Gagey, the head of Air France.

"This object did not contain explosives," Gagey told a news conference in Paris.

He congratulated the crew for their cool-headed reaction to divert the plane.

A safety check was carried out in the bathroom before the flight, he said. He denied any security failure in the flight, saying that passengers are checked and sometimes double-checked on flights.

Six passengers are being questioned over the incident, said a Kenyan police official, who is part of the investigation and who insisted on anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the press.

A passenger reported the device to the cabin crew who informed the pilots leading to an emergency landing at the Moi International Airport in Mombasa. One of those being interrogated is the man who reported the package.

The plane was carrying 459 passengers and 14 crew members and had left Mauritius at 9pm, said Kenyan police spokesman Charles Owino.

All passengers were safely evacuated and the device was taken out, he said.

A passenger who spoke to journalists after leaving the plane in Mombasa described the emergency landing.

"The plane just went down slowly, slowly, slowly, so we just realized probably something was wrong," said Benoit Lucchini of Paris.

"The personnel of Air France was just great, they were just wonderful. So they keep everybody calm," he said.

"So we secured the seat belt to land in Mombasa because we thought it was a technical problem but actually it was not a technical problem. It was something in the toilet. Something wrong in the toilet, it could be a bomb."

The Indian Ocean island of Mauritius is a popular destination for French tourists.

Steven Ciaran, 30, an Irishman working on Reunion Island, said he was seated at back of the plane watching a movie when he noticed the rushed movement of cabin crew preparing emergency drills.

Cabin crew told him it was a technical problem and they created a calm environment.

"I was very distressed because I could see we were far from the destination," said Ciaran. He said passengers reassured each other.

"I thought the plane had difficulty and not that it had anything to do with terrorism," he said.

The plane arrived in Mombasa about 1.30am and the passengers disembarked using an emergency slides, he said.

"A couple of people got twisted ankles but no one seriously injured," Ciaran said.

France has been under a state of emergency since the November 13 attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead.

 

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