Australian plane passenger threatened to 'blow the plane up'
- A "disruptive passenger" caused a flight from Australia to Malaysia to return to Sydney just three hours after taking off.
- A 45-year-old man was arrested and the rest of the passengers were released about three hours after the plane landed.
- The man is expected to be charged later in the day on Aug. 14, 2023.
An airline flight from Australia to Malaysia returned on Monday to Sydney, where a passenger was arrested hours later in what police described as an emergency incident.
The emergency caused dozens of domestic flight cancellations and delays at Australia's busiest airport.
Malaysia Airlines flight MH122 left Sydney Airport with 199 passengers and 12 crew aboard on an eight-hour flight to Kuala Lumpur and returned more than three hours later because of a "disruptive passenger," the airline said.
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"In the interest of safety, the commander of the flight made a decision to return to Sydney," Malaysia's national carrier said in a statement.
Nine News reported that a passenger holding a backpack on the Airbus A330 had threatened to "blow the plane up." Crew checked the backpack and found no explosives, it said.
A passenger is shown praying during a flight from Australia to Malaysia on Aug. 14, 2023. Malaysia Airlines flight MH122 returned on Monday to Sydney, where the passenger was arrested hours later in what police described as an emergency incident. (Velutha Parambath via AP)
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Australian Federal Police described the situation as an "emergency incident."
A 45-year-old man was arrested without incident and the rest of the passengers were released from the plane about three hours after it landed, a police statement said.
The man, who was not identified, was expected to be charged later Monday, police said. They did not specify an offense.
The airline said passengers would be transferred to the next available flights.
"Malaysia Airlines wishes to thank the authorities for their immediate response and to passengers for remaining calm and cooperative during the ordeal," the airline said.
Sydney Airport said some flights continued to land and take off while emergency agencies responded to the situation. No international flights were canceled.