Hijacking/Accident | |
---|---|
Date | 23 November 1996 |
Summary | Hijacking leading to fuel exhaustion, subsequent ditching |
Site | Grande Comore, Comoros 11°22′22″S 43°18′25″E / 11.37278°S 43.30694°E |
Aircraft | |
Aircraft type | Boeing 767-260ER |
Operator | Ethiopian Airlines |
IATA flight No. | ET961 |
ICAO flight No. | ETH961 |
Call sign | ETHIOPIAN 961 |
Registration | ET-AIZ |
Flight origin | Bole International Airport Addis Ababa, Ethiopia |
1st stopover | Jomo Kenyatta Int'l Airport Nairobi, Kenya |
2nd stopover | Maya-Maya Airport Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo |
Last stopover | Murtala Mohammed Int'l Airport Lagos, Nigeria |
Destination | Port Bouet Airport Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire |
Occupants | 175 (including 3 hijackers) |
Passengers | 163 (including 3 hijackers) |
Crew | 12 |
Fatalities | 125 (including 3 hijackers) |
Injuries | 46 |
Survivors | 50 |
Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961 was a scheduled international flight serving the route Addis Ababa–Nairobi–Brazzaville–Lagos–Abidjan. On 23 November 1996, the aircraft serving the flight, a Boeing 767-200ER, was hijacked[1] en route from Addis Ababa to Nairobi[2] by three Ethiopians seeking asylum in Australia.[3] The plane crash-landed in the Indian Ocean near Grande Comore, Comoros Islands, due to fuel exhaustion; 125 of the 175 passengers and crew on board, including the three hijackers, died.[3] This is the first recorded instance of a ditching utilizing a wide-body aircraft.
1996 spawns worst-ever accident totals
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).