City
Epaper

'Bomb' scribbled on tissue paper found on Air India plane at Delhi airport

By IANS | Updated: May 16, 2024 13:20 IST

New Delhi, May 16 A tissue paper, with the word 'bomb' written on it, was found in the ...

Open in App

New Delhi, May 16 A tissue paper, with the word 'bomb' written on it, was found in the Air India flight AI819 lavatory at Delhi airport, prompting security agencies to conduct an inspection but it turned out to be a hoax, a police official said.

Sharing the details, police said that on Wednesday at around 7.30 p.m., information was received regarding a tissue paper found in the lavatory of an Air India flight scheduled to depart for Vadodara, with the word "bomb" written on it.

"Following standard security protocols, a thorough inspection was conducted, and no suspicious items were found," said Deputy Commissioner of Police (IGI Airport) Usha Rangnani.

Meanwhile, in a statement, Air India said that following the security alert all passengers were safely deboarded, and the aircraft was taken to a remote bay for mandatory checks by security agencies.

"Our colleagues on the ground made sure to minimise the inconvenience caused to our guests by this unexpected disruption. Air India is committed to and accords top priority to the safety and security of its passengers and crew. Passengers have been flown to Vadodara in a special flight this morning," it said.

This comes after several hospitals in Delhi, along with the Indira Gandhi International Airport, were targeted with bomb threat emails on Sunday, alleging the presence of explosives on their premises. However, subsequent investigations by Delhi Police revealed the threats to be false alarms.

A fortnight ago over 150 schools across Delhi-NCR received hoax threat emails, prompting widespread police response.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalCooperation between Seoul, Tokyo more important than ever, South Korean President tells Japan PM

TechnologyCitizens, especially youth, should have basic understanding of AI: Ashwini Vaishnaw

BusinessCitizens, especially youth, should have basic understanding of AI: Ashwini Vaishnaw

NationalNo discussion on nuclear issue between DGMOs of India, Pakistan: Gen Dwivedi

NationalPeople have decided in favour of Shiv Sena-BJP candidates, says Eknath Shinde on Maha civic polls

National Realted Stories

NationalFrom bottleneck to breakthrough state: CM Yogi spells out UP’s transformation; hails PRAGATI 

NationalInter-state drug trafficking ring's kingpin arrested in Kolkata

NationalBorder Roads Organisation keeps highways open in harshest climatic conditions

NationalAttack on Tamil culture: LoP Gandhi criticizes Centre over Vijay's 'Jana Nayagan' certification delay

NationalDefence medical camp in Lakshadweep aligns with 'Swasth Bharat' vision, says Rajnath Singh