Saturday, April 29, 2023

TELLING THE TERRORISTS HIS BROTHER HAD DIED SAVED HIS LIFE

British man who survived 1986 Pan Am hijacking when terrorists slaughtered 21 finally confronts man who held him at gunpoint - and is stunned to learn 36 years later why he spared his life

Mike Thexton was returning home from a hiking trip when the plane was taken. A Palestinian terror cell held almost 400 people for 16 hours at gunpoint. Mike finally spoke to the group's leader this year and found out why he is alive


By Tom Cotterill and Elizabeth Haigh


Daily Mail

April 29, 2023


Mike Thexton, who was 27 at the time of his ordeal, was called to the front of the plane and begged the terrorists not to kill him

Mike Thexton, who was 27 at the time of his ordeal, was called to the front of the plane and begged the terrorists not to kill him

 

A British man who was on board the Pan Am 73 plane when armed terrorists stormed it during an assault in 1986 that killed 21 people has confronted the man who held him at gunpoint. 

Mike Thexton, then 27, was returning from Karachi in Pakistan after spending the summer hiking the Himalayas when a Palestinian terror cell hijacked the airliner. 

The jet never left the runaway and for 16 terrifying hours, Mike and 400 others were held captive by the four men, who were armed with rifles and hand grenades.  

The terror group's boss Zaid Hassan Abd Latif Safarini had planned to fly the plane into an Israeli military target, which would likely have seen all on board killed, but the pilots escaped through a hatch before they could break into the cockpit.

Mike begged for his life to be spared during the attack, and always wondered why he had survived. He was stunned to discover the reason one of the terrorists opted to spare him after more than three decades of questions. 


Terrorist Zaid Hassan Abd Latif Safarini of the feared Abu Nidal terror group spoke to Mike last summer to reveal why he didn't kill him

Terrorist Zaid Hassan Abd Latif Safarini of the feared Abu Nidal terror group spoke to Mike last summer to reveal why he didn't kill him 

 

After boarding the ill-fated flight, the Brit first realised something was wrong when he shouting on board. He then saw a man struggling with a flight attendant as he held a gun to her head. 

Mike's name was one of the first to be called by the terrorists, who were targeting western tourists, and they held him at the front of the plane before going on to slaughter 21 people and injure more than 100 others. 

The terrorists' first killed a passenger after failed attempts to negotiate for a pilot to return to the aircraft.

But despite being 'convinced' he was going to die, Mike - now 63 - managed to survive the encounter with just a 'scratch' to his elbow. 

After being held at the front for hours he fell asleep - before being awoken by one of the terrorists and instructed to return to the rest of the group. 

Almost 37 years on from the nightmare which saw 360 passengers held, he has relived his ordeal in a Sky News documentary, set to air tonight.

Mike had visited the Himalayas to honour his brother, Peter, 30, who died three years earlier while climbing Broad Peak, the 12th-highest mountain in the world.  

He says in the new Sky feature documentary, Hijacked: Flight 73, that he begged his captor not to kill him: 'Please, please don't hurt me. My brother has died in the mountains, my parents have no one else'. 

Mike said: 'He just waved his hand as if to say, I haven't got time for that.'

Speaking to MailOnline, Mike revealed how the death of his brother had touched the heart of Safarini - who is currently serving a 160-year prison sentence in the US. 

Mike spoke to the terrorist in a phone call last summer, and demanded to know why his life had been spared all those years ago. 

Safarini's reply took his breath away: 'You mentioned to me that your brother is killed,' he said in broken English. 'I say, "OK man, just sit aside". It touched my heart, actually.' 

'I was astonished that he told me that he put me back with the others at the end because of what I had said about my brother dying,' he told MailOnline. 

 

Injured victims are evacuated to a US military hospital in Germany after the 16-hour siege

Injured victims are evacuated to a US military hospital in Germany after the 16-hour siege

The jet never left the runaway and for 16 terrifying hours, Mike and 400 others were held captive by the four men, who were armed with rifles and hand grenades

The jet never left the runaway and for 16 terrifying hours, Mike and 400 others were held captive by the four men, who were armed with rifles and hand grenades

The Pan Am Flight 73 plane pictured after the siege was over - terrorists killed 21 and injured 100 more

The Pan Am Flight 73 plane pictured after the siege was over - terrorists killed 21 and injured 100 more

Passengers were held at gunpoint during a 16-hour ordeal, which left Mike always wondering why his life had been spared

Passengers were held at gunpoint during a 16-hour ordeal, which left Mike always wondering why his life had been spared

Mike's older brother Peter had been killed while climbing Broad Peak, the 12th-highest mountain in the world

Mike's older brother Peter had been killed while climbing Broad Peak, the 12th-highest mountain in the world

Mike pictured during his summer of hiking before the hijacking took place

Mike pictured during his summer of hiking before the hijacking took place

 

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