IC814 Hijacked!
eBook - ePub

IC814 Hijacked!

  1. 193 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

IC814 Hijacked!

About this book

What was the intelegence failure that led to the hijacking of Indian Airlines Flight IC814 from Kathmandu? Could the aircraft have been stopped at Amritsar airport? Was a commando raid planned on the aircraft? How was Rupin Katyal killed? Was the plane's destination always intended to be Kandahar? Was it merely prophetic that the hijackers had predicted the end of all negotiations on the millennium eve? These and other questions are answered in this blow-by-blow eyewitness account by Flight Engineer Anil K Jaggia who breaks the silence around the hijacking, with investigative reporting by senior correspondent Saurabh Shukla of The Indian Express

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Yes, you can access IC814 Hijacked! by Anil Jaggia,Saurabh Shukla in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Politics & International Relations & Asian Politics. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
1
December 24, 1999
HONEYMOON
GONE SOUR
Two men came running down the aisle. ā€œThey kept shouting ā€˜Heads down, heads down’,ā€ Subhash Kumar remembers with a shudder. Most passengers did not have time to react in their consternation, and so the hijackers began slapping them across their faces. Within moments the cabin had been subdued.
On board IC 813 to khathmandu
ā€œCaptain, doors armed, passengers briefed and strapped,ā€ the cabin reported to the cockpit. ā€œMay I have the flight time, Sir?ā€
Captain Devi Sharan, who was piloting flight IC 813 to Kathmandu, responded: ā€œOne hour and thirty minutes. Please expedite your safety announcements.ā€
Co-pilot Rajinder Kumar spoke into the radio telephone with Delhi Ground Control: ā€œIndian Airlines 813 ready to push back and starting.ā€
Ground Control: ā€œClear to push back and start facing east.ā€
Captain Sharan: ā€œBrakes off, commence push back facing east.ā€
Flight IC 813 taxied towards runway 28 at Palam, preparatory to take-off, two hours and forty minutes behind schedule.
Excitement tinged the air, for it was, after all, the last week of the millennium. People all around the world were preparing to party the entire week. The next day would be the last Christmas of the millennium. The difference was tangible: in the way that people walked and looked at you, and in the manner in which even the normally suspicious Customs officials were strangely amiable.
We were not to know then that a totally different kind of excitement lay ahead of us: one that would severely test our patience and show us just how fragile our lives were. In a few hours from now, we would be offered a choice between disaster and death.
The crisp morning, however, gave us no clue to what lay ahead.
The previous evening, before boarding the flight to Hyderabad, I had promised my two daughters that we would spend Christmas eve together at home. In fact, I had even asked the younger of the two to pick up a suit from Karan Sabri of Villa Appearances.
ā€œYou will never change your tailor, will you?ā€ my daughter had laughed, and I’d replied: ā€œDarling, he’s one of the few tailors who gives me a good fit.ā€
After the layover at Hyderabad, I’d flown back this morning and was listed for another flight. New Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport was exceedingly crowded—diplomats, tourists, businessmen, executives and students were heading back to their countries, while returning Indians were arriving in droves with their Christmas shopping.
I reported for duty at flight operations at Palam, and was told that I would be flying with Captain Devi Sharan and co-pilot Rajinder Kumar, the same team that had operated IC 939 back from Hyderabad. Seven of the eight cabin crew were also the same with only one additional crew member joining us at New Delhi. We were to fly IC 813/814 from Delhi to Kathmandu and back. Unfortunately, departure was delayed because the designated aircraft had developed an engineering snag. I did not like the delay. As a stickler for punctuality, I’m always irritated when a flight is pushed behind schedule. Besides, delayed flights mean that I have less time to spend with my wife and daughters. On the days that I come home late, my mother starts to worry. If the returning flight was very late, my daughters would grumble that I had broken my promise to them.
I was glad I had remembered to tell my wife to make sure a surprise Santa Claus was to be installed next to the Christmas tree my elder daughter had been decorating. My wife had grumbled that I was flying when, like most others, I too should have been with the family at home. ā€œYour Operations must realise that you too have a family, and we also look forward to family get-togethers,ā€ she had said. Even the goodbye peck on her cheek did little to improve her mood: ā€œI’d appreciate a day off more than this,ā€ she said tartly. When I gave my old mother a hug, she said what she always told me before I left for a flight: ā€œPlease check your aircraft properly.ā€ In decades, her advice had never varied.
On the way to the airport, I told the orderly to get my mother her supply of oxygen since the bottle for her evening therapy was empty.
As a flight engineer with Indian Airlines, I have spent almost 35 of my 58 years flying with the airline. It has had more than its share of rewards, but it has also had its downside. While you do get acquainted with the rich and the famous, you also have to suffer the agony of late hours, puffy eyes, dehydration and lonely hotel rooms. Life with the airline is an arduous one.
Such as now, for example. Here we were at the airport waiting for another aircraft to be made available. The new aircraft detailed was supposed to fly in from Calcutta. Since Calcutta was fog-bound that day, that aircraft too was delayed. We waited at the international departure lounge whiling away time. Finally, at 11.00 a.m. the Calcutta flight arrived and parked off the international departure bay at 1.10 p.m. It was a 248-seater Airbus A300.
Following the passenger security checks, the crew boarded Flight IC 813, and the flight was cleared for take-off.
By the time the Airbus lifted off the runway for Kathmandu, the winter sky over Delhi had cleared, and the sun shone through bright and clear. It was a perfect take-off, and for the pilots, it was ideal weather for flying. The engines purred, and radio contact with the Air Traffic Control guided us smoothly to our destination. Nothing, it seemed, could go wrong on such a beautiful day.
Barely an hour had passed at the controls before the aircraft, flying north, crossed into Nepalese airspace. The Himalayas spread in the north, their sheer expanse of snow looking like a giant white sheet draped over the peaks. I could well imagine the excitement this was causing in the cabin as passengers gathered around the windows. No matter how many times I have flown by these peaks, they always send a ripple of excitement through me. From the vantage of the cockpit, the sight of the Greater Himalayas unfolding before us was, as always, almost a religious experience.
Eight miles (13 km) short of the runway, we could see Kathmandu from the air. Captain Sharan flew the big bird gracefully, and at 3.25 p.m. the Airbus touched down at Tribhuvan International Airport.
Kathmandu’s airport is chaotic at the best of times. At the check-in counters, the scene can resemble a madhouse. Because of the large number of holiday passengers that day, people were pressed together like sardines, and pandemonium reigned. I was glad we weren’t stopping over at Kathmandu. Even though overnight halts come with the job, an airport that resembles a market is the sort of stopover one wants to avoid. I had recently spent four wonderful days in Kathmandu with my family on a holiday and I thought briefly of the fun we’d had. I was pleased I was going to be with them on Christmas eve in Delhi.
After the passengers had deplaned, the aircraft was cleaned, refuelled and readied for the flight back home. We had disembarked from the aircraft behind the passengers. Co-pilot Rajinder Kumar went to file clearance for the return flight with Air Traffic Control. Captain Sharan and I decided to take some extra fuel on the returning flight as a precaution due to Delhi’s foggy skies. I advised Commercial accordingly. By the time we returned to the aircraft, it had been cleaned in preparation for the return flight. As the passengers began to board, I began my pre-flight inspections.
On board IC 814 to New Delhi
By 4.00 p.m. the passengers—178 according to the trimsheet—had been seated, and the eight cabin crew on board were going through the departure rituals: checking that safety belts were in place, overhead lockers closed, seats upright, and that no one was in the toilets. At this time of the year, there were bound to be honeymooners returning from Nepal, with not an inkling about the dramatic turn their lives were soon to take. For, unknown to all of us, and spread through the cabin, five unwelcome passengers were settling into their seats: two in the executive and three in the economy class.
Inside the cockpit, we were readying for take-off . . .
ā€œClear to start number two.ā€
ā€œStarting engine number two.ā€
ā€œClear number one.ā€
ā€œStarting one.ā€
ā€œBoth engines stabilised. Push back completed and tractor disconnected. Good day.ā€
ā€œ814 ready to taxi.ā€
ā€œ814 clear to taxi to runway 20.ā€
ā€œ814 ready for departure.ā€
ā€œ814 surface wind is light and variable; clear for take-off.ā€
ā€œ814 clear for take-off.ā€
ā€œPower set.ā€
ā€œCheck 100 knots.ā€
ā€œChecked.ā€
ā€œV one rotate.ā€
At 4.00 p.m. IC 814 was given permission by Kathmandu ATC to taxi to the southbound runway number 20. At 4.05 p.m. the Airbus rose into the sky. The aircraft was on its way home.
The radio crackled again.
ā€œMaintain positive rate of climb.ā€
ā€œSetting course for Bravo 345 nowā€
ā€œ814 is checking Bravo Hotel Whisky (Bhairava), continuing climb to 260.ā€
ā€œ814 is level 260.ā€
By 4.25 p.m. we were over Bhairava town, bodering India and Nepal. In a few minutes we would be crossing into Indian airspace. Twenty-five minutes later we expected to be flying over the city of Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh.ā€
At 4.38 p.m. flight purser Anil Sharma buzzed Captain Sharan on the intercom to say he was bringing coffee and tea for the flight crew. When Sharma knocked on the cockpit door, I got up from my seat and opened the door for him to bring in the refreshments.
By 4.39 p.m. the aircraft had entered Indian airspace. In the cockpit, Sharma served Captain Sharan and Rajinder tea, while I had my usual coffee without sugar. ā€œIt’s been made by Rajani, not me,ā€ he said by way of conversation, ā€œbecause Mr Jaggia had said the coffee should be as nice as she is.ā€
ā€œThat’s good,ā€ said Captain Sharan.
ā€œBoss,ā€ piped in Rajinder, ā€œall Hyderabad people are nice.ā€
ā€œAre you referring to yourself?ā€ laughed the Captain. We all joined in the laughter, while Sharma opened the door to step out with the tray. It was the last time we would laugh in 1999.
Before Sharma could close the door, an intruder pushed him aside and forced his way into the cockpit. In the instant we caught a glimpse of him, we knew we were in trouble, for his face was masked under a red balaclava. Even his eyes behind the slit in the monkey-cap were hidden behind photochromatic lenses.
ā€œShit,ā€ protested Captain Sharan, ā€œwhat is this?ā€
ā€œKya hua? (What happened?) Who are you?ā€ I exclaimed.
Of course, it was immediately clear who he was, for he held a grenade in his left hand, a revolver in his right. He was about 5’ 2ā€ or 5’ 3ā€ tall, of small build but with a little p...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Names
  3. Other Lotus Titles
  4. Title
  5. Copyright
  6. Dedication
  7. Acknowledgement
  8. Content
  9. IC814: The Inside View
  10. 1 HONEYMOON GONE SUR
  11. 2 BLOOD IN THE AISLES
  12. 3 CHRISTMAS IN KANDAHAR
  13. 4 OPENING A CHANNEL TO THE TALIBAN
  14. 5 WAITING FOR RELIEF
  15. 6 MAKING lOVE TO THE ROGUES
  16. 7 BLIND DATE
  17. 8 WAR OF NERVES
  18. 9 THE FINAL DEAL
  19. 10 POSTSCRIPT
  20. 11 BLUNDERS GALORE
  21. ANNEXURES
  22. Backcover