Pakistan International Airlines Flight 712 Explained

Occurrence Type:Hijacking
Pakistan International Airlines Flight 712
Type:Hijacking
Site:Orly Airport, Paris, France
Aircraft Type:Boeing 720
Operator:Pakistan International Airlines
Origin:London
Stopover0:Paris
Stopover1:Rome
Stopover2:Cairo
Destination:Karachi
Fatalities:None
Injuries:None

On 3 December 1971, Jean Eugene Paul Kay, a French humanitarian activist, hijacked Pakistan International Airlines flight PK712 (a Boeing 720), at Orly Airport outside Paris, France. The flight was bound from London to Karachi via Paris, Rome and Cairo. Kay boarded the flight in Paris with five other passengers and took control of the aircraft on gunpoint. He demanded for 20 tons of medical supplies to be loaded onto the plane and sent to the refugees of Bangladesh Liberation War sheltered in India, and threatened to blow up the aircraft if the demands were not met. After a standoff of seven hours, Kay was arrested by two police personnel who boarded the aircraft in the guise of volunteers delivering the supplies he demanded.[1] [2]

In popular culture

1971 et Kay, a 2023 English-language Bangladeshi film, is based on this event.

See also

References

  1. Web site: Aviation Safety Network Hijacking Description . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20170202053854/https://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19711202-0 . 2017-02-02 . 2017-01-26.
  2. Web site: 1971-12-04 . Paris Police Thwart Airliner Hijacking . 2023-01-20 . The New York Times.