Hijacked - Flight 73: Hostage who survived the 1986 Pan Am plane attack finds out why one of the terrorists spared his life. Mike Thexton was returning to the UK from a months-long mountaineering trek when the Pan Am 73 plane was taken over by terrorists in Karachi in 1986.
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Hijacked - Flight 73: Hostage who survived the 1986 Pan Am plane attack finds out why one of the terrorists spared his life. Mike Thexton was returning to the UK from a months-long mountaineering trek when the Pan Am 73 plane was taken over by terrorists in Karachi in 1986.
In May 2021, a Ryanair commercial jet was intercepted by Belarusian authorities while flying over Belarus on route to Vilnius, Lithuania. This occurrence is considered to be the most recent hijacking incident in the global aviation industry.
But whilst hijackings can seem like a modern form of terrorism, they have a long history: in fact, hijackings today are very rare and much less frequent than the past. Airline hijacking – sometimes termed 'skyjacking' – is the unlawful seizure of an aircraft, either by an individual or an organized group.
The simple answer is yes, pilots do, and are allowed to sleep during flight but there are strict rules controlling this practice. Pilots would only normally sleep on long haul flights, although sleep on short haul flights is permitted to avoid the effects of fatigue.
There are around 12.8 commercial planes crashes per year in the US. And, 28.3 commercial plane crashes per year globally. As per the officials, there is a commercial plane crash every 16.7 million flights. It means for every 1,000,000 flights, 0.06 planes crash.
There hasn't been a deadly runway crash between commercial planes in decades; the National Transportation Safety Board has investigated just 56 commercial ground collisions and 19 near misses nationwide since 2008.