India warns of hijack threat to national carrier
NEW DELHI - The Indian interior ministry has recommended extra security measures for Indian airlines after intelligence on a threat from militants to hijack a plane of the national carrier Air India, officials said on Friday.
The warning comes just days before India's annual Republic Day on Tuesday, when there are often security scares.
India has beefed-up security measures and remains wary of militant threats after the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 166 people and raised tensions with nuclear-armed neighbor Pakistan.
We have alerted our civil aviation security people against a possible attempt to hijack an Indian airlines flight, U.K. Bansal, the special secretary for internal security in the Home (interior) Ministry, told Reuters.
This would obviously be from terrorist groups who are arraigned against Indian interests, he added, but did not specify which group.
An Air India spokesman would not comment on the threat, but told Reuters the airline would issue a statement later on Friday.
The ministry had not recommended the suspension of flights, but suggested measures such as greater frisking and deploying more sky marshals, Bansal said.
The biggest hijack threat was to flights by the carrier to and from the SAARC bloc of neighboring nations, he said.
The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation is made up of Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
The Indian government was criticized for its handling of the Mumbai rampage. India is now spending millions on new security measures, from commando bases in cities to navy patrols and better intelligence gathering.
(Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Alex Richardson)
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