Audio By Carbonatix
An Egyptian hijacker who forced a domestic flight to land in Cyprus used a fake suicide belt, officials said.
His motives remain unclear but the Cypriot president said the incident was not terrorism-related.
Footage released by Egypt's interior ministry shows the man passing through several security checks at Alexandria's Borg El Arab airport.
The drama ended with all passengers released unhurt at Larnaca airport and the man giving himself up.
Cypriot officials named the hijacker as Seif Eldin Mustafa and said he was "psychologically unstable".
Foreign Minister Ioannis Kasoulides said Mustafa had initially asked to speak with his Cypriot ex-wife, who police brought to the airport, before making a series of "incoherent" demands.
Police in Cairo were questioning Mustafa's relatives, AP news agency reported.
The Egyptair plane left Larnaca at 22:05 local time (19:05 GMT) bound for Cairo, its original destination.
Questions over security
Egypt's tourism ministry insisted all airport security measures had been "fully implemented" before EgyptAir Flight MS181 began its flight earlier in the day.
CCTV footage released by the interior ministry shows Mustafa being frisked at two security checks and passing a slim bag through x-ray machines.
The BBC's Youssef Taha says Egypt has taken steps to improve airport security after Russian Metrojet Flight 9268 was blown up over Sinai last October.
They include an extra $1bn a year and a deal with British consultancy Control Risks to review procedures at Cairo, Sharm El-Sheikh and Marsa Alam airports.
Despite this, our correspondent says checks remain inconsistent, with many VIPs and MPs refusing to be searched and airport and airline staff routinely bypassing full security screening.
'Always a woman involved'
After a standoff lasting several hours, the hijacker walked down aircraft steps and surrendered to Cypriot security forces.
Shortly before that, several people were seen fleeing the aircraft, including one person, apparently a crew member, who climbed out of a cockpit window.
Other passengers had left the plane after appearing to have been released.
Earlier, Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades had responded to a reporter's question about whether the hijacker was motivated by romance, by laughing and saying: "Always there is a woman involved."
EgyptAir said the Airbus A320 was carrying 56 passengers from Alexandria to Cairo, along with six crew and a security official.
A statement from Egypt's civil aviation ministry said 26 foreign passengers were on board, including eight Americans, four Britons, four Dutch citizens, two Belgians, two Greeks, a French national, an Italian and a Syrian.
Latest Stories
-
JOY FM rolls out “Safari Experience” — a refreshing Ghana Month escape into nature, culture and connection
32 minutes -
Ghana loses over GH¢4.5bn annually to traffic congestion, new study on urban mobility shows
41 minutes -
ADB unveils new corporate cloth, determines to dominate industry
49 minutes -
Peak Milk extends Ramadan support following courtesy visit to national Chief Imam
57 minutes -
No solo bid for Ken Agyapong — Joojo Rocky Obeng dismisses ‘third force’ calls as politically ridiculous
1 hour -
Today’s Front pages: Friday, February 13, 2026
2 hours -
5 arrested for open defecation at Osu Cemetery
2 hours -
A Home that Travels: How the Diaspora carries Pan-Africanism across borders
2 hours -
Obituary: Hon. Stanley Basil Bade Carboo
2 hours -
Government to absorb COCOBOD’s $150m losses as Cabinet directs immediate cocoa purchases – Finance Ministry
2 hours -
Mpraeso MP demands immediate probe and arrest over alleged exploitation of young Ghanaian women
2 hours -
‘No bed syndrome,’ and how a hit-and-run victim was refused emergency care by Ridge, Police, Korle Bu hospitals for close to 3 hours before he died
2 hours -
Give Love a second chance on Valentine’s Day – Counsellor Perfect
3 hours -
GSS generates the numbers that drive national development – Government Statistician Dr Iddrisu
3 hours -
We are not policy advisers, we generate the data – Government Statistician clarifies GSS’ role
4 hours
