Officials: Cops Nab Sochi-Bound Hijacking Suspect

Turkish media: Passenger made bomb threat on Ukraine-Turkey flight.

ByABC News
February 7, 2014, 12:59 PM
Turkish security officials enter the private Turkish company Pegasus plane before they evacuate passengers at the Sabiha Gokcen Airport in Istanbul, Turkey, Feb. 7, 2014. An official says authorities have subdued a man who attempted to hijack a Turkish plane to Sochi, Russia, and that the other passengers have been evacuated.
Turkish security officials enter the private Turkish company Pegasus plane before they evacuate passengers at the Sabiha Gokcen Airport in Istanbul, Turkey, Feb. 7, 2014. An official says authorities have subdued a man who attempted to hijack a Turkish plane to Sochi, Russia, and that the other passengers have been evacuated.
Emrah Gurel/AP Photo

Feb. 7, 2014 — -- The man who allegedly attempted to hijack a Ukrainian flight and take it to Sochi, where the opening ceremony for the Winter Olympics began today, has been subdued and no explosives were discoverd on board, American and Turkish officials said.

The unidentified 45-year-old Ukrainian man, who was a passenger on board a Turkey-bound plane, in mid-flight reportedly claimed to have a bomb and demanded the pilots take him and the other passengers to Sochi, the site of the Olympics in southern Russia. Instead, the pilots landed in Istanbul where Turkish television showed it sitting on the tarmac for hours.

Eventually, authorities were able to sneak aboard the plane and subdue the man, causing only minor injuries, Istanbul Governor Huseyin Mutlu told reporters.

Russian media, citing Ukrainian security officials, reported the man was highly intoxicated and a U.S. official briefed on the situation told ABC News there was a "99 percent" chance that was the case. Still, the U.S. official said security authorities in Turkey and the world over are taking the matter seriously.

Security in Sochi has been high for months due to the threat posed to the Games by Islamic militants in the region.

Sochi lies on the Black Sea, just 300 miles away from the heartland of an Islamic militancy in the North Caucasus. Doku Umarov, the leader of the insurgents known to some as Russia's Osama bin Laden, told his followers last summer they should do what they can to disrupt the Games, which he called a "satanic dance" on the bones of their ancestors.

In the past three months, Russia has suffered three suicide bombings in southern cities attributed to the militants. In January the U.S. State Department urged its citizens traveling to Sochi to be "vigilant and exercise good judgment" during the Games because of the terror threat.

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