Commodore son's flight of fury
ANANYA SENGUPTA

New Delhi, Feb. 2: A chartered accountant apparently sold on his air
commodore father's profession is being held responsible for Sunday's
"hijack threat" that activated a security drill, held up 30 flights
and 2,000 passengers and spoiled the home minister's Sunday.

Jitendra Kumar Mola, who had soaked in Goa's sun and sea for 11 days
with other chartered accountants, will now spend 14 days in a jail in
Delhi. If he is found guilty under a stringent law invoked against
him, he could be kept in jail for life or as many as 14 years.

The 40-year-old Mola has been charged with endangering public safety
by claiming in mid-air that he was involved with the 1999 hijacking of
an Indian Airlines plane -- because he was not allowed to switch his
designated seat on an IndiGo flight from Goa to Delhi yesterday.

Mola's threat triggered an emergency drill at Delhi airport that put
the terror-wary country on edge for several hours and inconvenienced
thousands (see chart).

Delhi police sources claimed Mola had said during questioning that he
made the hijack claim "just for kicks".

Accounts of fellow passengers and investigators suggest the chartered
accountant took pride in posing as a sky marshal and had some
fascination for aviation posts -- an interest he could have picked up
from his father who is a retired air commodore. Mola and his family
stay in a defence officer's colony in Sector 7 in west Delhi's Dwarka.

The police said Mola told an airhostess that he was a sky marshal
(assigned in Indian planes after the 1999 hijacking) and misled
several passengers on or before the flight.

Sameer Uppal, who was picked up by commandos because he was seen
speaking to Mola but was eventually freed, told the police that the
fellow passenger had introduced himself as an Indian Air Force
officer.

"It was all a misunderstanding as far as I was concerned. He was
sitting next to me on the flight and we got talking. I don't know him
and the conversation lasted less than a couple of minutes," said
Uppal.

Another passenger Harpreet Anand, also picked up but released later,
said Mola claimed he was an official of the Directorate General of
Civil Aviation.

These claims could have been passed off as harmless but the matter
spun out of control when Mola was not allowed to change seats. Mola
told the airhostess he was involved in the Kandahar hijacking. The
airhostess then informed the captain who alerted Delhi airport.

PTI quoted police as also saying: "Mola claimed that he had a gun and
infectious needles."

Mola was on his way back from Goa where he had gone to attend a
conference of chartered accountants. Some passengers said he was
drunk.

But a medical examination did not find traces of alcohol -- the only
anomaly mentioned was low pressure which a doctor said could not be
the reason for his behaviour.

Additional commissioner of police Ujjwal Mishra said Mola had
complained of breathlessness and low blood pressure at Goa airport.
"He told airlines officials that after an energy drink he would be
fine. He was allowed (to have the drink) but no medical treatment was
given," Mishra said.

"When a patient is suffering from a low blood pressure condition, he
should ideally be sitting down with his leg up or, better still, lying
down. But Mola was apparently pacing up and down the aisle. I don't
see any connection -- his low BP couldn't have made him aggressive,"
said Rajat Mitra, a doctor in Delhi, a city not unfamiliar with
motorists flying off the handle at the slightest provocation.

"There are some people who get provoked very fast…. They always want
to be in a situation of power," Mitra added.

Mola has been booked under the Suppression of Unlawful Acts in the
Safety of Civil Aviation Act, 1982, a non-bailable offence that
carries a maximum punishment of life term.

He has also been charged under Section 336 (act endangering life and
personal safety of others) and Section 506 (punishment for criminal
intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code. The bailable sections entail a
maximum punishment of two years in jail and a fine of Rs 250.

Mola did not betray any aggression as he headed to jail. Wearing a
grey blazer and a white shirt, he refused to comment on his behaviour.

"I don't know why he did it. But he did threaten the girl (the
airhostess) and caused a lot of inconvenience. So he had to be
booked," Mishra said.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1090203/jsp/frontpage/story_10477528.jsp

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