A handout released by Indonesian Air Force shows Matt Christophers Lockley (shorts) of Australia being arrested by Indonesian Air Force soldiers after landing on the Virgin Australia 737-800 plane at Ngurah Rai airport in Denpasar on the resort island of
Bali:
Indonesia on Sunday released an Australian man who caused a hijack scare on a flight to Bali by trying to break into the cockpit because the incident occurred on a plane registered in Australia, police said. (Drunk passenger sparks hijack scare on Virgin Australia plane)
Indonesian authorities say the drunken man pounded on the cockpit door during Friday's Virgin Australia flight, forcing the pilot to issue an alert code to air traffic control. Bali's airport was closed for nearly two hours because of the incident, forcing several flights to be diverted. (Bali hijack alert passenger 'mistook cockpit for toilet')
The cabin crew managed to restrain the man and put him in a rear seat for the remaining hour of the flight, and Indonesian troops later took him into custody.
The man was released late on Sunday and was to leave Bali on his own initiative, Bali police special crimes chief Col. Suryambodo Asmoro told reporters.
"Under Indonesia's law, he couldn't be charged in Indonesia because what he did was on a plane registered in Australia," Asmoro said, adding that it would be up to Australian authorities to decide whether to charge the man.
The Boeing 737-800 was carrying 137 passengers and seven crew members from Brisbane, Australia, to the resort island of Bali, which is a leading tourist destination for Australians.
No passengers or crew were hurt in the incident, according to the airline.
Indonesian authorities say the drunken man pounded on the cockpit door during Friday's Virgin Australia flight, forcing the pilot to issue an alert code to air traffic control. Bali's airport was closed for nearly two hours because of the incident, forcing several flights to be diverted. (Bali hijack alert passenger 'mistook cockpit for toilet')
The cabin crew managed to restrain the man and put him in a rear seat for the remaining hour of the flight, and Indonesian troops later took him into custody.
The man was released late on Sunday and was to leave Bali on his own initiative, Bali police special crimes chief Col. Suryambodo Asmoro told reporters.
"Under Indonesia's law, he couldn't be charged in Indonesia because what he did was on a plane registered in Australia," Asmoro said, adding that it would be up to Australian authorities to decide whether to charge the man.
The Boeing 737-800 was carrying 137 passengers and seven crew members from Brisbane, Australia, to the resort island of Bali, which is a leading tourist destination for Australians.
No passengers or crew were hurt in the incident, according to the airline.
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