In Somalia Plane bomber was meant to be on Turkish flight
"That particular passenger (who was behind the blast) boarded the aircraft on a Turkish Airlines boarding pass and was on the list for the Turkish Airlines manifest," Yassin told Reuters by telephone from Dubai.
A suspected suicide bomber who blew a hole in the fuselage of a Daallo Airlines plane last week and forced it to make an emergency landing in Mogadishu was meant to be on a Turkish Airlines flight, the Daallo chief executive said on Monday.
The
bomber was sucked out of the plane through the one-metre wide hole when
the blast ripped open the pressurised cabin in mid-air, officials said.
The pilot landed the plane in the Somali capital, from where it had taken off.
No group has so far taken responsibility for the attack but a U.S. government source last week said the United States suspects Islamist militant group al Shabaab, which is aligned to al Qaeda, was responsible for the blast.
Mohamed
Yassin, Daallo Airlines chief executive, said most of the passengers
who were on the bombed flight were scheduled to fly with Turkish
Airlines, but were ferried to Djibouti by one of his planes after the
Turkish carrier cancelled its flight, citing bad weather.
"That
particular passenger (who was behind the blast) boarded the aircraft on
a Turkish Airlines boarding pass and was on the list for the Turkish
Airlines manifest," Yassin told Reuters by telephone from Dubai.
Yassin
said Daallo picked up the 70 stranded Turkish Airlines passengers to
fly them to Djibouti, including the suicide bomber. In total, the flight
had 74 passengers.
Turkish Airlines did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Somalia,
mired in conflict since civil war broke out in 1991, has few air links
outside East Africa. In 2012, Turkish Airlines became the first major
international commercial airline to fly out of Somalia in more than two
decades.
Mogadishu's heavily guarded airport,
which is often compared to the Green Zone in Baghdad, has several safety
perimeter fences and checkpoints. It houses a large U.N. compound along
with several other Western embassies.
Somali officials said an investigation had been launched and arrests made, including airport workers.
CCTV
footage released by the Somali National Intelligence Agency (NISA)
appears to show two airport workers inside the terminal handing the
suicide bomber a lap top stuffed with explosives, according to the
government spokesman.
"Some of the people that we have arrested are co-operating,"
spokesman Abdisalam Aato told Reuters. He said security at the airport
has been stepped up and that the government was seeking new technologies
to improve screenings.
Al Shabaab, which wants to
topple the government and impose a harsh version of Islamic law, has
targeted the airport in the past. It has also attacked the Turkish
embassy in Mogadishu.
Yassin said Daallo has been
reassured by Somali officials that security was being improved, and will
keep flying to Somalia. We have been there for 25 years," he said. "Our efforts to keep Somalia linked to the rest of the world will continue."
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