Suspicious Device Found on Diverted Air France Flight, but No Explosives Discovered Yet

Suspicious Device Found on Diverted Air France Flight, but No Explosives Discovered Yet
An Air France jet liner which made an emergency landing is seen at Moi International Airport in Mombasa, Kenya Sunday, Dec. 20, 2015. The Boeing 777 Air France flight 463 from Mauritius to Paris was forced to land in the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa after a device suspected to be a bomb was found in the lavatory, a Kenyan police official said Sunday. (AP Photo/Edwin Kana)
The Associated Press
12/20/2015
Updated:
12/20/2015

NAIROBI, Kenya—No explosives have been found yet on the suspicious device that caused an Air France flight from Mauritius to Paris to be diverted to Mombasa, Kenya, said a Kenyan police official.

The device, found in a lavatory on the plane, looked like a cardboard box with a stop watch taped to it, said the official who is part of the investigation and who insisted on anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the press. The box has been taken apart and no explosives have been found yet, he said. The digital watch is being analyzed, he said.

Six passengers are being questioned over the incident, he said.

A passenger reported the device to the cabin crew who informed the pilots leading to an emergency landing at the Moi International Airport in Mombasa. One of those being interrogated is the man who reported the package.

The Boeing 777 Air France flight 463 was heading to Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris when the pilots requested an emergency landing at the Moi International Airport at 12:37 a.m., Kenyan police spokesman Charles Owino said.

“It requested an emergency landing when a device suspected to be an explosive was discovered in the lavatory,” Owino said.

The plane was carrying 459 passengers and 14 crew members on board and had left Mauritius at 9 p.m., Owino said.

All passengers were safely evacuated and the device was taken out, said Owino.

Some of the passengers who were aboard Air France plane arrive at a hotel in Mombasa, Kenya, from Moi international airport Mombasa, Sunday Dec. 20, 2015, after their Air France flight from Mauritius to Paris was forced to land in the Kenya because a suspicious package was found in the lavatory, a Kenyan police official said Sunday. (AP Photo)
Some of the passengers who were aboard Air France plane arrive at a hotel in Mombasa, Kenya, from Moi international airport Mombasa, Sunday Dec. 20, 2015, after their Air France flight from Mauritius to Paris was forced to land in the Kenya because a suspicious package was found in the lavatory, a Kenyan police official said Sunday. (AP Photo)

 

“The object, believed to be an explosive device has successfully been retrieved from the aircraft,” said Kenya Airports Authority in a post on Twitter, adding that scheduled flights to Mombasa were disrupted during the interval but that normal operations have resumed.

A passenger who spoke to journalists after leaving the plane in Mombasa described the emergency landing.

“The plane just went down slowly, slowly, slowly, so we just realized probably something was wrong,” said Benoit Lucchini of Paris.

“The personnel of Air France was just great, they were just wonderful. So they keep everybody calm. We did not know what was happening,” said Lucchini. “So we secured the seat belt to land in Mombasa because we thought it was a technical problem but actually it was not a technical problem. It was something in the toilet. Something wrong in the toilet, it could be a bomb.”

The Indian Ocean island of Mauritius is a popular destination for French tourists.

France has been under a state of emergency since the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead. The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for that and the Oct. 31 crash of a Russian passenger in the Sinai desert that killed all 224 people aboard. Moscow has said that the crash was caused by a bomb on the plane.

Two Air France flights from the U.S. to Paris were diverted on Nov. 18 after bomb threats were received. No bombs were found on the planes from Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.