IC 814: The Kandahar Hijack — Bogus Call in The Name of Govt Secy Allowed Plane to Fly Away from India, Say Sources | Exclusive – News18

The mini-series IC 814: The Kandahar Hijack features Vijay Varma, Patralekhaa and Naseeruddin Shah. (Image: Instagram)

The mini-series IC 814: The Kandahar Hijack features Vijay Varma, Patralekhaa and Naseeruddin Shah. (Image: Instagram)

According to the government sources, that bogus call in the name of union government joint secretary J Lal led the staff at Sri Guru Ram Das Ji International Airport in Amritsar to remove barricades and allow the aircraft to fly away

The multi-starrer Netflix series IC 814: The Kandahar Hijack, which relives the 1999 hijacking of an Indian Airlines flight by terrorists, has created a buzz around the country and reignited conversations about the incident from about 25 years ago. Now government sources have told CNN-News18 that a phoney call in the name of union government joint secretary J Lal had allowed the plane to take off from Amritsar and leave Indian airspace.

On December 24, 1999, five masked men hijacked the aircraft — IC 814 — 40 minutes after it took off from the Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu, bound for New Delhi. The hijackers forced the captain of the flight — Devi Sharan — to fly the plane into Pakistani airspace, where he did not receive clearance to land. The plane then landed in Amritsar, with barely 10 minutes’ worth of fuel left.

After refuelling the plane, the hijackers forced the pilot to fly the plane to Lahore, where the pilot made a desperate landing despite not getting permission from Pakistan’s ATC, which turned off all lights and navigational aids at the airport.

But at the last moment, they were given permission and it was here that they refuelled and made their way to Dubai. After being denied permission, the flight landed at the Al Minhad Air Base in the UAE. The hijackers released 27 of the 176 passengers on board, including the body of 25-year-old Rupin Katyal, who had been fatally stabbed by the captors.

After this, the plane finally landed in the hijackers’ original destination, Taliban-controlled Afghanistan’s Kandahar airport. It was here that the hijackers negotiated with the then Atal Bihari Vajpayee government, which eventually ended on December 30 with the release of all the hostages for three terrorists — Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, Masood Azhar, and Mushtaq Ahmed Zargar.

According to the government sources, that bogus call in the name of union government joint secretary J Lal led the staff at Sri Guru Ram Das Ji International Airport in Amritsar to remove barricades and allow the aircraft to fly away.

After touching down in Amritsar, the captain wanted fuel in the plane and, sources said, there were no visible efforts at a rescue operation as people didn’t recognise it as the “missing plane”. The captain knew it was a hopeless situation but tried his best to secure the plane and passengers, they added.

Meanwhile, they said, a call came from the Crisis Management Group, asking that the plane be immobilised and tankers slowly moved in so the hijackers would think they were coming for refuelling.

These CMG calls were identified as Rubey Lal and another was from the union cabinet secretary himself, who wanted the plane to remain on the ground so the National Security Guard (NSG) could be put into action and the local Punjab police were alerted.

However, said the sources, a call came, asking for the aircraft to be refuelled immediately and airport staff acted on these directions swiftly, without realising that it was someone pretending to be the joint secretary from the ministry of civil aviation with the name J Lal. He also directed authorities to give a clear path to the flight immediately.

The sources said the Amritsar airport, which was short on staff in the evening, and amid all the chaos, allowed the plane to fly away, frustrating the government’s plans.

Sources said according to various theories this was either someone from Pakistan who wanted the aircraft to go out of India’s hands or someone from PM Vajpayee’s office who didn’t want commando action because their relative was on the flight.