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NewsAugust 19, 2007

ANKARA, Turkey -- Two men hijacked a Turkish passenger plane bound for Istanbul on Saturday, holding several people hostage for more than four hours before surrendering, officials said. Six crew members and 136 passengers were on board the Atlasjet flight from Ercan airport in northern Cyprus when the men, claiming to have a bomb, demanded that the plane be diverted to Iran, authorities said...

By SUZAN FRASER ~ The Associated Press
A hostage, center, waves his shirt in front of the hijacked Atlas-Jet passenger plane after being freed on the tarmac at the Antalya International Airport in Antalya, Turkey,  Saturday, Aug. 18, 2007. Two men who hijacked a Turkish passenger plane in an apparent protest against the U.S. surrendered to authorities after holding some crew members and passengers hostage for more than four hours. No one was hurt.  (AP Photo/Kaan Soyturk)
A hostage, center, waves his shirt in front of the hijacked Atlas-Jet passenger plane after being freed on the tarmac at the Antalya International Airport in Antalya, Turkey, Saturday, Aug. 18, 2007. Two men who hijacked a Turkish passenger plane in an apparent protest against the U.S. surrendered to authorities after holding some crew members and passengers hostage for more than four hours. No one was hurt. (AP Photo/Kaan Soyturk)

ANKARA, Turkey -- Two men hijacked a Turkish passenger plane bound for Istanbul on Saturday, holding several people hostage for more than four hours before surrendering, officials said.

Six crew members and 136 passengers were on board the Atlasjet flight from Ercan airport in northern Cyprus when the men, claiming to have a bomb, demanded that the plane be diverted to Iran, authorities said.

Pilots managed to land the plane at Antalya airport in southwest Turkey, and most of the passengers escaped safely when the hijackers released the women and children on board, officials said.

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The hijackers held some crew members and passengers hostage for more than four hours before eventually allowing them to leave and peacefully surrendering, officials said. Private CNN-Turk television, citing police sources, said the purported bomb turned out to be modeling clay.

One of the men was Turkish and the other was believed to be a Palestinian carrying a Syrian passport, Transport Minister Osman Gunes said.

A passenger of the hijacked Atlasjet aircraft reacts after arriving at Istanbul Ataturk airport in Istanbul, Turkey, Saturday, Aug. 18, 2007. Two men hijacked a Turkish passenger plane bound for Istanbul on Saturday, holding several people hostage for more than four hours before surrendering to authorities, officials said. Six crew members and 136 passengers were on board the Atlasjet flight from Ercan airport in northern Cyprus when the men, claiming to have a bomb, demanded that the plane be diverted to Iran. (AP Photo/Ibrahim Usta)
A passenger of the hijacked Atlasjet aircraft reacts after arriving at Istanbul Ataturk airport in Istanbul, Turkey, Saturday, Aug. 18, 2007. Two men hijacked a Turkish passenger plane bound for Istanbul on Saturday, holding several people hostage for more than four hours before surrendering to authorities, officials said. Six crew members and 136 passengers were on board the Atlasjet flight from Ercan airport in northern Cyprus when the men, claiming to have a bomb, demanded that the plane be diverted to Iran. (AP Photo/Ibrahim Usta)

Their motives for hijacking the plane were not immediately clear. Gunes said the hijackers told an official they "apologized to the Turkish nation" for seizing the plane.

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