Poging GOUD - Vrij
Get His Gun
Reader's Digest International
|October 2017
On The airport tarmac in Jamaica, an armed man takes a plane's crew hostage. It's up to a pair of young flight attendants to save them all.
SANGSTER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT in Montego Bay, Jamaica was quiet. The flow of vacationers that pass through the busy portal to the country’s north coast had slowed to a trickle as passengers boarded the final flight.
CanJet flight 918 was a double-stop flight from Halifax, taking on and letting off passengers in Jamaica before continuing to Cuba, then heading back to Nova Scotia, where the nowdefunct low-cost charter airline was based. Just after 10 p.m., on Sunday, April 19, 2009, as the last few passengers snaked toward the screening area, a lanky figure appeared among the tourists.
Handsome and young, wearing shorts and loafers, the man looked like any other well-to-do Jamaican. When security guards asked him to walk through the metal detector, however, he refused. He hitched up his shirt to reveal a gleam of silver, then pulled out a .38 revolver and sprinted toward the gate where the Boeing 737 sat waiting.
Onboard, eight crew members and 159 unsuspecting passengers were already seated when the gunman entered. The pilot, Captain James Murphy, came out of the cockpit to investigate, and flight attendant Heidi Tofflemire and copilot Glenn Johnson locked the door behind him, sealing off the flight deck. When the man announced that he needed to leave Jamaica that night, James lied and said the plane still needed to be refueled. That’s when the hijacker placed the gun’s muzzle against the pilot’s throat. “I am God,” he said. “I like to take lives.”
Dit verhaal komt uit de October 2017-editie van Reader's Digest International.
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