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Kuwait Airways Flight 221
1984 flight hijacking From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kuwait Airways Flight 221 was a scheduled passenger flight from Kuwait City to Karachi, Pakistan, with a stopover in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. On 3 December 1984, the flight was hijacked by four armed Lebanese Shia militants, reportedly affiliated with the Hezbollah movement. The hijacking resulted in a six-day hostage crisis and the murder of two American passengers. The incident is considered one of the earliest major hijackings linked to Middle Eastern militant groups in the 1980s.[1][2]
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Background
Flight 221 was operated by Kuwait Airways and involved an Airbus A300C4-620 aircraft, registration 9K-AHG. The aircraft was delivered on June 8, 1984 and was destroyed on February 15, 1991 at Saddam International Airport when it was destroyed by US-backed coalition bombing during the Gulf War. The flight departed Kuwait International Airport with 161 people onboard, including passengers and crew. After take-off from Kuwait, four Lebanese men armed with guns and grenades hijacked the aircraft and diverted it to Mashhad, Iran.
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Hijacking
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After taking control of the aircraft, the hijackers ordered the crew to fly to Iran. Iranian authorities at first denied permission to land, but eventually relented when they learned the aircraft was low on fuel. The plane landed at Mashhad International Airport in northeastern Iran.
Once on the ground, the hijackers issued formal demands for the release of the 17 prisoners held in Kuwait due to their involvement in the 1983 Kuwait bombings. Over the course of the standoff, women, children, and Muslim passengers were gradually released. However, the situation escalated when two American officials, Charles Hegna and William Stanford (employees of USAID), were shot dead and their bodies dumped on the runway.
The few dozen passengers who remained on board—particularly Americans—were reportedly threatened and tortured. "Every five minutes there was a frightening incident. There was no letup at all," British flight engineer Neil Beeston told the BBC.
Paradoxically, the hijackers released a statement claiming: "We do not have any enmity toward anyone and we do not intend to deny the freedom of anyone or to frighten anyone..."
Passengers who remained on board reported being threatened, physically abused, and beaten for speaking without permission.[3][4]
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Iranian involvement
The Iranian government engaged in negotiations with the hijackers but did not meet their demands. On 8 December 1984, Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces stormed the aircraft and freed the remaining hostages. Reports suggest the assault was swift and effective, with minimal additional injuries.[5]
Authorities initially announced that the hijackers would be brought to trial. However, they were ultimately released and allowed to leave the country. This led to allegations of Iranian complicity in the hijacking and claims by some passengers and officials that the rescue operation had been staged. At least one Kuwaiti and two Pakistani passengers claimed that after landing, the hijackers received additional weapons and equipment, including handcuffs and nylon ropes used to tie passengers to their seats. One American official remarked, "You do not invite cleaners aboard an airplane after you have planted explosives, promised to blow up the plane, and read your last will and testament.
Aftermath
The hijacking of Flight 221 had significant geopolitical ramifications. It highlighted the growing influence of militant Shi'a groups in the Middle East and their willingness to target Gulf states allied with the United States. The incident also intensified tensions between Kuwait and Iran, particularly as Kuwait was supporting Iraq in the ongoing Iran–Iraq War.
The flight crew and many passengers later testified to the trauma and physical abuse endured during the ordeal. The incident also served as a precursor to a wave of hijackings and hostage crises throughout the 1980s, particularly involving Hezbollah and its affiliates.[6]
The US State Department announced a $250,000 reward for information leading to the arrests of those involved in the hijacking but made no military response. Later press reports linked Hezbollah's Imad Mughniyah to the hijackings.[7]
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See also
References
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