Close Menu
Modern Embassy World
    What's Hot

    TAGMA 2026 to Spotlight Next-Generation Tooling at Die & Mould India Expo

    March 30, 2026

    Official Mobile Application for Indian Visa: Su-Swagatam

    September 16, 2025

    Global Fintech Festival (GFF) 2025 Scheduled To Be Held From 7-9 October, 2025 In Mumbai

    September 16, 2025

    “Su-Swagatam” Mobile Application For Indian Visa.

    August 29, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Modern Embassy World
    Modern Plastics Award
    LinkedIn Facebook YouTube Instagram X (Twitter) Telegram
    Saturday, June 6
    • Home
    • About
    • News
      • Ambassador Insights
        • Ambassador Appointments
        • Ambassador Interviews
        • Diplomatic Profiles
        • Guest Columns
        • Leadership Messages
        • Opinion Columns
      • Diplomatic Affairs
        • Bilateral Relations
        • Consular Services
        • Embassy Announcements
        • Foreign Policy Updates
        • Multilateral Diplomacy
        • Treaties & Agreements
      • Directory & Services
        • Contact & Protocol Guide
        • Embassy Directory (By Country & Region)
        • Emergency Assistance
        • Language Services
        • Passport & Legalization Services
        • Visa Application Guidelines
      • Events & Summits
        • Cultural Exchange Events
        • Diplomatic Receptions
        • International Summits & Conferences
        • National Day Celebrations
        • Photo Galleries & Highlights
        • Upcoming Events Calendar
      • Global Missions
        • Consulates Worldwide
        • Country Profiles
        • Diplomatic Appointments
        • Embassies & High Commissions
        • New Embassy Openings
        • Permanent Missions to UN & Other Bodies
      • Security & Policy
        • Geopolitics & Regional Stability
        • Defense & Strategic Alliances
        • Immigration & Visa Policy
        • International Law
        • Cyber & Information Security
        • Sanctions & Compliance
      • Sustainability & Global Goals
        • Climate Diplomacy
        • United Nations SDGs
        • Green Initiatives by Embassies
        • Development Programs
        • Disaster Response & Humanitarian Aid
        • NGO & Embassy Collaboration
      • Trade & Investment
        • Bilateral Trade Opportunities
        • Country-Specific Investment News
        • Embassy-Backed Trade Missions
        • Economic Cooperation
        • Visa & Business Travel
        • Trade Agreements
    • Featured
    • Global News
    • Technology
    • Contact US
    Modern Embassy World
    Home»News»Covering the IC-814 hijack – The Hindu
    News

    Covering the IC-814 hijack – The Hindu

    Junior EditorBy Junior EditorSeptember 5, 2024No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link

    [ad_1]

    Armed Taliban fighters at Kandahar airport on December 27, 1999. The hijacked Indian Airlines plane is in the background.

    Armed Taliban fighters at Kandahar airport on December 27, 1999. The hijacked Indian Airlines plane is in the background.
    | Photo Credit: Reuters

    The controversial Netflix series, IC814: The Kandahar Hijack, has attempted to recount the events of 1999 for a new generation. Every journalist who covered the story at the time has their own personal narrative about the last week of the previous millennium when, instead of celebrating, India lurched through the harrowing ordeal of the IC-814 hijack, and the sadness and anger that followed the surrender of three dreaded terrorists at Kandahar.

    My own story began six years before that, when I was a new recruit at CNN International. It was a slow news day in August 1995, and the office bell was rung by a courier carrying a video tape from Srinagar. As I popped the tape into the machine, a wave of sickness hit me. That image of a European man with curly hair in a green kameez, with his severed head placed on his body, still flashes before me. Hans Ostrø was among the six foreigners kidnapped by a group called Al-Faran, believed to be the Pakistan-backed Harkat-ul-Ansar, founded by Masood Azhar, who had been arrested in India in January 1994. They had been taken hostage at gunpoint in July 1995, when they had gone trekking in the Kashmir Valley, and the gunmen had demanded the release of Azhar in exchange for them. One hostage escaped, while the rest were never found. The kidnappers had carved the name of their group on Ostrø’s chest.

    In 1994 too, the Harkat-ul-Ansar had kidnapped two sets of foreigners with the aim of exchanging them for Azhar. They had first kidnapped two British men, who they had been forced to release under public pressure. Their kidnapping later of four tourists had been thwarted by the police after a shoot-out. Omar Saeed Sheikh (later known as the killer of journalist Daniel Pearl), who had travelled to India to free Azhar, was injured and arrested in the encounter. Why the Indian government did not join the dots to realise how important Azhar was to the Inter Services Intelligence-funded operations in Jammu and Kashmir despite these kidnappings and prepare better for a bigger hostage situation will remain a mystery.

    On December 24, 1999, I was at the Airports Authority of India building at Palam airport, getting permissions for our crew to film on the tarmac on New Year’s day, when the hijack took place. When an official told me about it, I thought it was a security drill. I realised something was wrong when senior officials rushed to the domestic terminal. Nothing had hit the airwaves yet, and my news editors in the U.S. were hesitant to even take the story live until it was confirmed on camera. The next few hours were agonising for the families. When the aircraft landed in Amritsar, there was hope that the crisis could be managed. But a hapless government was unable to ensure that it stayed in India, and there was never any public scrutiny of why our systems didn’t move quicker. There were other questions that never got answered too, as the hijack unfolded, such as why the international community — the U.S., the U.K., Saudi Arabia, and the UAE — which had influence over Pakistan and the Taliban, did not do more to end the crisis, or realise the fillip this attack would give terrorists globally. The 9/11 attacks took place just two years later.

    I did not sleep that night until the aircraft landed in Kandahar, or much of the next week. Journalists faced similar sleepless nights through the four-day siege of Mumbai in 2008 and the three-day-long Pathankot attack in 2016. On December 31, 1999, I was on the tarmac, with dozens of journalists, when the External Affairs Minister escorted the three terrorists to Kandahar. We stayed there until he returned hours later with the freed hostages. While there was joy and relief for the families, there was also foreboding of what havoc those terrorists would wreak. Twenty-five years later, they are all free in Pakistan and have never been brought to justice for holding a nation hostage.

    suhasini.h@thehindu.co.in

    Published – September 06, 2024 02:03 am IST

    [ad_2]

    Source link

    Airports Authority of India Al-Faran Daniel Pearl Hans Ostrø Harkat-ul-Ansar IC814 IC814: The Kandahar Hijack Inter Services Intelligence Kandahar Masood Azhar Omar Saeed Shaikh
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
    Previous ArticlePM Modi to boost BJP’s J&K poll campaign next week with 3 rallies
    Next Article Hunter Biden pleads guilty in tax case in Los Angeles
    Junior Editor

    Related Posts

    Directory & Services

    Official Mobile Application for Indian Visa: Su-Swagatam

    September 16, 2025
    Cultural Exchange Events

    Global Fintech Festival (GFF) 2025 Scheduled To Be Held From 7-9 October, 2025 In Mumbai

    September 16, 2025
    Directory & Services

    “Su-Swagatam” Mobile Application For Indian Visa.

    August 29, 2025
    Cultural Exchange Events

    7Th August: National Handloom Day

    August 8, 2025
    Directory & Services

    Latest Announcement On Indian Visa

    August 7, 2025
    Diplomatic Affairs

    Signing and Exchange of Notes for Japan’s Grant Aid to India: “Project for Human Resource Development Scholarship”

    August 7, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Editors Picks

    TAGMA 2026 to Spotlight Next-Generation Tooling at Die & Mould India Expo

    March 30, 2026

    Official Mobile Application for Indian Visa: Su-Swagatam

    September 16, 2025

    Global Fintech Festival (GFF) 2025 Scheduled To Be Held From 7-9 October, 2025 In Mumbai

    September 16, 2025

    “Su-Swagatam” Mobile Application For Indian Visa.

    August 29, 2025
    Advertisement
    Modern Plastics India
    LinkedIn Facebook YouTube Instagram X (Twitter) Telegram

    MODERN BUSINESS GLOBAL NETWORK

    Modern Business India
    Modern Business Asia
    Modern Business Europe
    Modern Business America
    Modern Business Gulf
    Load More

    MODERN PLASTICS GLOBAL NETWORK

    Modern Plastics India
    Modern Plastics Asia
    Modern Plastics Europe
    Modern Plastics America
    Modern Plastics Global
    Load More

    WOMEN INDIA NETWORK

    Women India Network
    Women India
    Beauty N Fitness India
    Beauty N Fitness Times
    Modern Fashion Life Style
    Load More

    Copyright 2026All Rights Reserved by Modern Embassy World.

    Website Design: Chrysolite Media Network Pvt. Ltd.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.