US citizen shot dead by passenger after attempting to hijack plane
20 hours ago
Tourists board a Tropic Air plane at the Sir Barry Bowen Municipal Airport in Belize City on Thursday. AFP
A US man hijacked a small plane in Belize on Thursday, stabbing two passengers and a pilot, before one of the stabbed passengers fatally shot him, officials in Belize and the United States said. The plane then landed safely.
The Tropic Air plane was carrying 14 passengers and two crew members, and was flying from Corozal, a small town near Belize's border with Mexico, heading to the popular tourist destination of San Pedro when it was hijacked.
The plane circled in random directions for nearly two hours as the drama unfolded in the skies. The plane was tailed by a police helicopter before touching down at an airport in the coastal town of Ladyville.
The would-be hijacker threatened the pilot shortly after the Cessna Grand Caravan from Belize's Tropic Air took off in the morning with 14 on board from the town of Corozal.
It was headed for the Belizean island of San Pedro, but the man ordered the pilot to head "out of the country," police commissioner Chester Williams told Channel 5 news.
A Tropic Air counter is seen at Philip S.W. Goldson International Airport in Belize City. AFP
The plane hovered for some time over the international airport of Belize City before landing just as it was about to run out of fuel, at which point the hijacker stabbed two fellow passengers.
One had a firearm he was licensed to carry, and shot the attacker dead, according to officials and local media.
Police identified the assailant as 49-year-old US national Akinyela Sawa Taylor, who was apparently a military veteran. The injured passengers were taken to the hospital.
The US Embassy in Belize expressed its regret over the incident on the eve of the Easter long weekend.
"It really highlights the importance of safety and security," the embassy's public affairs officer Luke Martin told reporters.
"We have a strong relationship with Belizean law enforcement, and in times like this, that partnership proves crucial," with a quick exchange of information, he added.