Police barrier tape seals off the area where a hijacked EgyptAir A320 plane was parked at Larnaca Airport in Cyprus on Tuesday, March 29 2016. Picture: EPA
Police barrier tape seals off the area where a hijacked EgyptAir A320 plane was parked at Larnaca Airport in Cyprus on Tuesday, March 29 2016. Picture: EPA

LARNACA — A man thought to be strapped with explosives hijacked an Egyptian aircraft on a flight between Alexandria and Cairo on Tuesday, and forced it to land in Cyprus, Egyptian officials said.

After the EgyptAir jet landed at Larnaca airport, the hijacker released all the people onboard except five foreign passengers and the crew, EgyptAir said.

About 60 people, including seven crew, had been onboard, Egyptian and Cypriot officials said.

"The negotiations with the hijacker have resulted in the release of all the plane passengers with the exception of the crew and five foreigners," the airline said.

Egypt’s Civil Aviation Ministry said the aircraft’s pilot, Omar al-Gammal, had informed authorities that he was threatened by a passenger wearing a suicide explosives belt and forced him to land in Larnaca.

A Cyprus Foreign Ministry official said he could not confirm the man was rigged with explosives. The hijacking occurred in Cyprus’s flight information region.

The aircraft was an Airbus 320, Egypt’s aviation ministry said.

Eyptian state media named the hijacker as Ibrahim Samaha, an Egyptian, but gave no other details about him.

Passengers on the aircraft included eight Britons and 10 Americans, three security sources at Alexandria airport said.

Israel scrambled warplanes in its airspace as a precaution in response to the hijacking, according to an Israeli military source.

Egypt’s vital tourism industry was already reeling from the crash of a Russian passenger aircraft in the Sinai in late October.

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has said it was brought down by a terrorist attack. Islamic State has said it planted a bomb on board, killing all 224 people on board.

Cyprus has experienced little militant activity for decades, despite its proximity to the Middle East.

A botched attempt by Egyptian commandos to storm a hijacked airliner at Larnaca airport led to the disruption of diplomatic relations between Cyprus and Egypt in 1978.

In 1988, a Kuwaiti airliner which had been hijacked from Bangkok to Kuwait in a 16-day seige had a stopover in Larnaca, where two hostages were killed.

Reuters