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Terrorist Dry Runs on Airlines Watch Dog Annie Jacobsen Reports The Latest Try via The Aviation Nation

Atlas jet pilotsNewspapers in Turkey are debating whether or not the two Atlas jet pilots should have abandoned the cockpit after their plane was hijacked. The pilots, Cemal Doganay and Faruk Çagimni, escaped by breaking a cockpit window and jumping to the ground shortly after the plane landed at Antalya airport to refuel. Meanwhile, the flight's 136 passengers and six crew members were being held hostage in the aircraft cabin. After the pilots left the plane, some passengers started fainting from lack of oxygen and the hijackers agreed to open the door. Passengers then began leaping out from the plane and apparently the hijackers lost control of the situation.

Some newspaper readers expressed concern that the pilots' licenses should be revoked — that their leaving the airplane to terrorists' control was an act of cowardice and betrayal. Others felt the pilots' actions was a smart counterterrorism move — one that led to the ultimate surrender of the hijackers. 

Atlas jet CEO Tuncay Doganer told the press that the pilots abandoning the plane was "part of the plan." But that contradicts what pilot Faruk Çagimni told English language SABAH Newspaper. 

Cagimni stated that he was threatened that one passenger will be killed if he does not leave the plane [sic]; besides he received an instruction to leave the plane.

Çagimni said: "I saw that the pirates [i.e. hijackers] introducing themselves as Al Qaeda were very serious. They threatened the cabin chief to throw away from the plane. They told [us] they knew how to fly a plane."

Media reports say as many as twenty commandos were on standby at the airport. 

(photo credit: SAHAH Newspaper: Atlas jet pilots Cemal Doganay and Faruk Çagimni)

Mommen Abdul Aziz TalikhTurkish authorities say that an Egyptian national, Mommen Abdul Aziz Talikh, who hijacked an Atlas jet flying from Cyprus to Istanbul on Saturday, attended a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan. Turkish Transport Minister Osman Gunes said Talikh was carrying a Syrian passport although he is believed to be "of Palestinian origin." State run news agency Anatolia reports that the jihadist spent time in a Saudi prison alongside a senior al Qaeda member named only as "Ahmad." From the International Herald Tribune:

Police did not say at which al-Qaida camp or which country Talikh received training, the agency said. Police also did not say why Talikh was jailed in Saudi Arabia.

Police said Talikh, who is of Palestinian origin, was born in Cairo and his family was still living in Saudi Arabia. His alleged accomplice, Mehmet Resat Ozlu, was from Turkey's southeastern city of Sanliurfa.

Mommen Talikh and Mehmet Ozlu reportedly shared an apartment together in Northern Cyprus. Ozlu was registered with the local university in the literature department. Talikh worked as a waiter. According to police, the men claim that they wanted to go to Afghanistan to join the Taliban and that it was for this reason they had asked that the plane be taken to Iran which borders Afghanistan. It's a bizarre and highly implausible story — Talikh didn't need to hijack a passenger plane the last time he went to Afghanistan — but then again this information is coming from the same Turkish officials who shook hands with the hijackers after they surrendered. 

From National Public Radio:

In the end, the hijackers surrendered with their hands in the air. They shook hands with Turkish officials before being seated in a police car and taken away for interrogation.

This is the fifth hijacking or attempted hijacking involving Turkish airspace and/or Turkish planes in four years. In all of those instances, including the hijacking of an Atlas jet on Saturday, the hijackers claimed, falsely, to be carrying bombs.  

The Middle East Media Research Institute, or MEMRI, reports that "it is also said that Talikh may have ties with some leading Al Qaeda operatives," (translated from Turkiye Haberci) If this is the case, it is a much bigger story than it already is.  

Ercan International Airport, where the hijackers boarded the Atlas jet flight, is the principal airport for the Turkish-controlled area of Cyprus called the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, or TRNC. The TRNC is not recognized by international law. Flights from Ercan Airport fly only to Turkey. 

A Syrian Passport holder, who authorities say may be Palestinian, and a Turkish man hijacked an Atlasjet Airlines flight from Cyprus to Istanbul earlier today and demanded to be taken to Iran or Syria. Alaaddin Yuksel, the Governor of Antalya, Turkey, told reporters that the men claimed to be members of al Qaeda. The ordeal is over an the men have surrendered. All the hostages have been released. From CNN:

Witnesses said the incident started shortly after the flight had taken off from Ercan airport in Turkish-recognized Northern Cyprus when two men from the back of the plane rushed to the front and tried to break open the cockpit door.

When their attempts failed, witnesses said the men began talking to the flight attendants in a mix of Arabic and English and asked to be taken to either Iran or Syria.

Passenger Ercan Tekkan told Reuters that thought the plane was going to crash: 

"The plane made some maneuvers and we thought the plane was going to crash … Then the plane landed and the pilots escaped from the cockpit while the hijackers kept kicking the cockpit door," he said. 

Another passenger, Barkin Inan, told CNN the experience was "terrifying" but noneless tried to summon fellow passengers to action. 

"They [the hijackers] looked anxious and were sweating. They went towards the cockpit. I shouted 'hijackers' to warn the other passengers but most of them were asleep," he said.

After the pilots made an emergency landing, the pilots fled the plane. This is an unusual move in a hijacking, (i.e. the captain stays with the ship) but the CEO of the airline's parent company explained why:

Aydin Kiziltan, CEO of Worldfocus, which owns the plane and had leased it to Atlas-Jet, said the pilots had also left the aircraft to prevent the hijackers from forcing them to fly the plane. The pilots left the plane through the cockpit window under orders from security forces, aviation authorities said. 

Atlasjet CEO Tuncay Doganer told reporters:  

"The adventure that started early in the morning finally came to an end…With the two hijackers having surrendered, the incident ended with no bloodshed." 

It remains unclear what weapons the men used to hijack the plane. Most news agencies are reporting that the men claimed to have a bomb and one was armed with a knife. Apparently, a third passenger is being considered as a possible accomplice. 

Is airline passenger John Doe being sued by the imams for reporting their suspicious behavior, or not? That is the question that apparently remains unanswered. Washington Times reporter Audrey Hudson filed a report yesterday chronicling the behind the scenes dispute over whether or not the imams are suing the John Doe passengers from a November 2006, US Airways flight from which the imams were removed.   

Frederick J. Goetz, one of the the imams' attorneys, says that the six Muslim clerics have dropped the John Doe passengers from their federal lawsuit. But the Becket Fund, a "religious-freedom advocacy group" offering free legal representation to the John Does, says the imams lawyers are playing games. According to Hudson, Becket Fund President Kevin J. Hasson went so far as to send the imams' attorney a pre-written document which would officially release the John Does from the case if signed. But so far, the imams' attorneys refuse to sign. 

"Now we"re making it easy for them; if they truly mean not to sue the passengers, all they have to do is sign on the dotted line," Mr. Hasson said.

The plaintiffs' failure to formally dismiss the passengers from the suit is "another sign that what they're really up to is trying to intimidate future airline passengers from coming forward with their suspicions," Mr. Hasson said.

"That is outrageous and has nothing to do with religious liberty. And we will continue to fight them every step of the way," Mr. Hasson said of the imams' lawsuit.

Mr. Goetz said he will not respond to the Becket Fund's request, because the court has yet to approve the group's amicus brief, filed Aug. 1, that requests charges against the "John Doe" passengers be dropped.

The Minneapolis Airport Commission, named alongside US Airways in the imams' federal lawsuit suit, said through its spokesman, Pat Hogan, that its attorneys have not been notified that the John Doe passengers have been dropped from the suit.

Syrian cleric Yassin Nassari — caught at Luton Airport in England carrying blueprints for a Quassam artillery rocket — has been found guilty of possessing documents "likely to be useful to a terrorist" and sentenced to three-and-a-half-years in prison. Nassari, who lives in England, was returning from Syria and Holland with his wife and their baby when they were stopped at the airport last year. The BBC has more:

Nassari, a teacher, businessman and student of Arabic, was found not guilty of the more serious offence of possessing articles for terrorist purposes.

Sentencing him, Judge Gerald Gordon said: "I have come to the conclusion that, sadly, like a number of young Muslims, you have somehow been indoctrinated into beliefs supporting terrorism by others. I have no doubt you wanted to immerse yourself in this fundamentalist trash, but in the material available to me there is nothing to indicate that any actual terrorist use would have been made of it by anyone."

Nassari told the court that he did not know the blueprints for the rocket were in his possession and that they had been put there by someone else. In a search of Nassari's appartment, police found videos of terrorist attacks, beheading videos, and literature on how to martyr yourself in the name of jihad. More from the BBC:

The trial also heard that Nassari had a letter from his wife in which she appeared to be encouraging him to become a terrorist martyr.

The court was told it read: "I am so proud of my husband. I am happy that Allah has granted you the chance to be a martyr…Maybe one day I can follow you. If I can't, I will send our son to you so he can follow his father's footsteps."

But Mrs El-Hor said the letter was a work of fiction and she knew nothing about what Nassari was doing. 

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