Lion Air passengers suffer broken bones and head wounds after man makes false bomb threat

Passengers fled the Lion Air plane after overhearing 26-year-old, Frantinus Nirigi, telling a flight attendant there was a bomb on the Boeing 737 Monday night. (Gerry Soejatman Twitter)

At least 10 passengers on a flight preparing to take off from Borneo island were injured, most of them with broken bones and head wounds, after panic ensued when a man claimed there was a bomb on board, Indonesian police said Tuesday.

Passengers overheard the 26-year-old man, Frantinus Nirigi, telling a flight attendant there was a bomb on the Lion Air Boeing 737, which was to carry 189 passengers to Jakarta on Monday night, said West Kalimantan police spokesman Nanang Purnomo. An eventual inspection of the plane found no explosives.

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After Nirigi made the bomb claim, another passenger broke open the emergency exits, enabling panicked passengers to flee the aircraft, Purnomo said. He and Nirigi were both arrested.

Video posted online showed dozens of people standing on the plane's right wing. Some slid down the right engine and landed on the tarmac.

Purnomo said eight passengers were hospitalized with broken bones and head wounds, while two others had minor injuries. Police did not provide details on how the passengers were injured.

In video taken by a passenger and posted online, a flight attendant identified only as Cindy told the airport authorities that passengers were pushing each other after the captain asked them to leave the plane immediately.

"I asked passengers to immediately leave the plane calmly and orderly, but instead they pushed each other and scrambled out of the plane," she said.

Airline spokesman Danang Mandala said in a statement that the one-hour flight was delayed because a panicked passenger opened both emergency exits on the right side of the aircraft without instructions from the cabin crew.

He said a "bomb joke" was not a valid reason for someone to force open an emergency exit without the crew's instructions.

No suspicious items were found after a thorough inspection of the plane by police and security personnel at Supadio airport in Pontianak city. The flight departed for Jakarta, Indonesia's capital, after a three-hour delay, said Lukman Nurjaman, Lion Air's district manager in Pontianak.

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The incident is the latest bomb hoax on flights in Indonesia. On Sunday, Lion Air removed a 25-year-old passenger from a flight departing from Jakarta bound for Malaysia after he joked about the presence of a bomb on board. Indonesian flag carrier Garuda delayed a flight in March after a passenger claimed he was carrying a bomb.

National police spokesman Muhammad Iqbal said the two men arrested in Monday's incident face up to eight years in prison.

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