Incident Summary:

1/27/2001: An Iraqi male passenger named Hussein Mohsen Jouda al-Rabii attempted to hijack a Gulf Air flight that was traveling from Hong Kong to Abu Dhabi via Bangkok, Thailand. The passenger brandished a knife and demanded that the plane land in Australia instead of Abu Dhabi; he was overpowered in a scuffle with crew members. Two crew members were injured; however, all of the 202 passengers were unharmed. The flight landed two hours late in Abu Dhabi and the hijacker was taken into custody. The motive is unclear.

GTD ID:
200101270002

When:
2001-01-27

Country:
Thailand

Region:
Southeast Asia

Province/administrative
region/u.s. state:

Bangkok

City:
Near Bangkok

Attack Information
Type of Attack (more) Hijacking
Successful Attack? (more) No
Target Information (more)
Target Type: Airports and Aircraft
Name of Entity Gulf Air
Specific Description Flight 153
Nationality of Target International
Target Type: Private Citizens & Property
Name of Entity Civilians
Specific Description Passengers on the flight
Nationality of Target Multinational
Additional Information
Hostages No
Ransom No
Property Damage No
Weapon Information
Type Sub-type
Melee Knife or Other Sharp Object
Additional Information
Suicide Attack?No
Part of Multiple Incident?No
Criterion 1 (more) Yes
Criterion 2 (more) Yes
Criterion 3 (more) Yes
Doubt Terrorism Proper (more) No
Additional Information Sources provide different numbers for crew members on board the flight.
Perpetrator Group Information
Group Name Claimed Responsibility
Iraqi extremists No
Perpetrator Statistics
Number of Perpetrators 1
Number of Captured Perpetrators 1
Casualty Information
Total Number of Casualties 0 Fatalities / 2 Injured
Total Number of Fatalities 0
Number of U.S. Fatalities 0
Number of Perpetrator Fatalities 0
Total Number of Injured 2
Number of U.S. Injured 0
Number of Perpetrators Injured 0
Sources
"Gulf Air hijacker wanted flight to go to Australia," Reuters, January 30, 2001.
"Gulf air plane lands safely in Abu Dhabi after foiled hijack attempt," Xinhua News Agency, January 28, 2001.