Posted on 08/23/2006 9:47:09 AM PDT by areafiftyone
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Dutch police arrested 12 passengers on a U.S. Northwest Airlines plane bound for India which was forced to turn back to Amsterdam's Schiphol airport on Wednesday, news agency ANP reported.
ANP quoted a police spokesman as saying 12 were arrested, but declined to give further details due to the ongoing investigation.
Police officials were not immediately available to comment.
The Dutch Defense Ministry said earlier the pilot decided to turn back after the crew said several of the 149 passengers on flight 42 to Mumbai were behaving suspiciously.
Security has been increased at airports worldwide in the last two weeks after British police said they had foiled a plot by British Muslims to blow up planes in the mid-Atlantic using liquid explosives disguised as drinks.
The plane was heading for Bombay, same place that the train attack came from on 7-11.
This seems like a test run of some sort....Can someone speculate? Since the team members will be red listed from other flights, I imagine their work is done, and they will report to their superiors what took place so the the "real" group can perform the dastradly deed.
I don't understand the purpose of handing the cell phones to one guy unless the cell phones could be opened up and contained bomb making material. Watch for a ban on cell phones and lap tops on planes now....
These guys will be arrested and detained for a short while then released since they didn't do anything illegal.
Those whacky Amish are at it again!!
That's it!
Yup I heard that recently too. I bet you these people were from Pakistan.
Mennonite
I'll bet these "middle eastern men"(aka muslims)staged the whole incident to create a panic amongst the passengers.Wonder how the msm is going to handle this?
By Nicola Leske 29 minutes ago
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Dutch police arrested 12 passengers on a U.S. Northwest Airlines plane bound for India which was forced to turn back to Amsterdam's Schiphol airport on Wednesday, news agency ANP reported.
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ANP said a police spokesman said 12 were arrested, but declined to give further details due to the ongoing investigation. Dutch police were not immediately available to comment on the report.
The Dutch defense ministry said earlier the pilot decided to turn back after the crew said several of the 149 passengers on flight 42 to Mumbai were behaving suspiciously.
Security has been increased at airports worldwide in the last two weeks after British police said they had foiled a plot by British Muslims to blow up planes in the mid-Atlantic using liquid explosives disguised as drinks.
"Police took off a number of people on board and took them for questioning," the Dutch defense ministry said.
An airport spokeswoman said the return of the Northwest plane had not affected other flights at Schiphol, Europe's third largest cargo airport and fourth biggest passenger hub.
Dutch airport officials said the Northwest pilot decided to turn back his 273-seat DC10-30 when it was in German airspace.
A Northwest spokeswoman said passengers were staying in local hotels, adding Northwest would try the flight to Mumbai again on Thursday.
Last month serial bomb blasts hit commuter trains in Mumbai, killing more than 180 people. Indian police said on Tuesday they had foiled another possible attack in the city after they shot dead a suspected Pakistani national.
SECURITY THREAT
The Dutch Defense Ministry said it was keeping the national counter-terrorism coordinator informed. The government has not decided to take any extra security measures, it said.
The Netherlands' security alert level has been at "substantial" since bombings in London last year, the second highest in a four-stage warning system.
The Dutch secret service AIVD warned in March that the war in Iraq and the presence of Dutch troops in Afghanistan might motivate possible attacks and encourage the recruitment of home-grown Islamist militants.
There have been several scares since the British plot was uncovered, including at the Tri-State Airport in Huntington, West Virginia, on a Pacific Blue flight from Fiji to Sydney and on a British plane from London to Egypt diverted to Italy.
An Iberia Airlines flight bound for Madrid was turned back to the Netherlands in April after a woman raised the alarm about a passenger she thought was acting suspiciously. The passenger was later cleared of any wrongdoing.
The 2004 murder of a filmmaker critical of Islam by a Dutch Moroccan shook the country and highlighted the activities of home grown militants. Nine young Muslim men were sentenced to jail this year for belonging to a terrorist group.
British prosecutors investigating the plane bomb plot foiled earlier this month announced on Monday they were charging 11 people after police found bomb-making equipment, suicide notes and "martyrdom videos." No decision has yet been taken on whether to charge another 11 people who are still being held.
(Additional reporting by Alexandra Hudson in Amsterdam and Jason Neely in London)
There are a lot of Muslim Indians in Mumbai/Bombay, so they don't have to be Pakis to be Muslims.
If it was, you wouldn't have been able to stop us.
Great point.
LOL!
At least we know now who to profile!
I just, coincidentally, heard Annie Jacobson talking on my local radio show this morning. She's the lady that has written the book on what happened on Flight 327 a couple of years ago when the arabs started getting up and going to the bathroom one after the other, and then when the plane was on approach all got up at the same time and moved to prearranged positions. The story would curl your hair. The Feds talked to them for 5 minutes and let them go. THey were all traveling on expired visas and paid cash for their one way flights. Good thing this didn't happen in the US. The feds would have swept it under the rug.
LOL. Glad you are on my side then.
Also, this flight originated in Minneapolis
Yikes! Could they be testing the equipment??
LOL - Brilliant
I just love the slanders thrown out at the U.S. - which, by the way, is the country that has done the most in this global war against terrorism. But don't let that little tidbit get in the way of a good tale.
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