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Britain Scrambles Warplanes for Pakistani Airliner Britain Scrambles Warplanes for Pakistani Airliner
(35 minutes later)
LONDON — Britain’s Royal Air Force on Friday scrambled at least one Typhoon fighter jet to investigate a midair incident involving a Pakistani airliner flying from Lahore to Manchester, in the north of England, the Defense Ministry said. LONDON — British police arrested two men aboard a diverted Pakistani airliner on Friday after Britain’s Royal Air Force scrambled Typhoon fighter jets to escort the airplane flying from Lahore to Manchester, in the north of England, according to defense ministry officials and the police.
Few details of the episode were immediately available. Airport authorities in Manchester said the Pakistan International Airlines plane, with almost 300 people on board, had been due to land there but had been diverted to Stansted, just north of London. Few details of the episode were immediately available. Airport authorities in Manchester said the Pakistan International Airlines plane, with more than 300 people on board, had been due to land there but had been diverted to Stansted, just north of London, where it landed and taxied to a remote area.
The BBC said there had been some kind of “disturbance or situation” on the flight, prompting the emergency deployment of the warplane a standard procedure, according to defense ministry officials, when some types of alarm are raised by pilots. The Typhoon took off from an air base at Coningsby in Lincolnshire. The police at Stansted said that officers then boarded the plane and arrested two men “on suspicion of endangerment of an aircraft.”
British news reports said the P.I.A. plane had landed at the airport in Stansted, where the local police said only that “an incident has occurred on an aircraft” and that the police were responding to it. The BBC said there had been some kind of “disturbance or situation” on the flight, prompting the emergency deployment of the warplane a standard procedure, according to defense ministry officials, when some types of alarm are raised by pilots. The Typhoons took off from an air base at Coningsby in Lincolnshire.
The episode came a day after two assailants hacked to death an off-duty British soldier on a busy street in London, but there was no suggestion that the two episodes were linked. The Defense Ministry said the aircraft had been scrambled “to investigate an incident involving a civilian aircraft within U.K. airspace.”
An official who spoke in return for anonymity under ministry rules said such deployments “happen more often than we would think. It’s standard procedure in situations when, for example, contact with the pilots and the plane is lost.”
Pakistan International Airlines said the airplane, with 308 passengers and 14 crew members, had taken off after customary security checks in Lahore and was heading to Manchester when British airport officials told the pilot to divert to Stansted, which is officially designated as suitable for dealing with emergencies.
The diversion of the plane came a day after two assailants hacked to death an off-duty British soldier on a busy street in London, but there was no suggestion that the two episodes were linked.
Earlier on Friday, a British Airways jet made an emergency landing at Heathrow Airport in London after developing engine trouble on takeoff. The plane, bound for Oslo with almost 80 people on board, landed safely and was evacuated.Earlier on Friday, a British Airways jet made an emergency landing at Heathrow Airport in London after developing engine trouble on takeoff. The plane, bound for Oslo with almost 80 people on board, landed safely and was evacuated.

Julia Werdigier contributed reporting.

Julia Werdigier contributed reporting.