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'Iranian' passengers blocking plane at Brussels airport give up
Some 60 protesters of "Iranian origin" gave themselves up to Belgian authorities after occupying a Lufthansa airliner for nearly 16 hours at Brussels airport, Belgian police announced.
The passengers left the German plane at around 0430 GMT after being threatened with "administrative arrest", meaning identity checks and further controls if deemed necessary, federal police spokesman Els Cleemput told journalists.
The authorities had negotiated late into the night with several dozen passengers who refused to leave the Lufthansa plane in what appeared to be a protest against the EU's conciliatory policies towards Iran.
Earlier a correspondent for ZDF German television who spoke with one of the passengers by telephone said he had been told that no arms were aboard the plane and that no hostages were being held.
The remaining passengers "all have passports from the European Union," but "they say they are of Iranian origin," Cleemput said earlier.
"We don't know the nationalities (of the passengers still on board) and we don't know for the moment what they are demanding," she said, adding that they had given police a document of about 20 pages containing their demands.
A young Iranian based in Brussels who identified himself as Ramin and said he was speaking on behalf of the passengers, said the action had been under preparation for five months by a London-based Iranian monarchist group, "Azarakhsh".
"We all ask the leaders of the European Union (not to) support the regime in Iran. We don't ask nobody, no country, nor any power in the world to help us to change the regime. We can do it ourselves," he said.
But the RTL-TVI television station said they were "political demands" linked notably to the European Union's policies with regard to Iran.
The German magazine Der Spiegel said it had received a letter from the group, described as Iranian men and women protesting against a Tehran regime responsible for "torture and terror."
In Berlin, a Lufthansa spokesman said the protest "had nothing to do with our company.
"They have chosen without a doubt a strange place to demonstrate," said the spokesman, Thomas Ellerbeck
He said the plane was carrying 120 passengers, all of whom except the demonstrators had left the plane.
Air traffic was not disrupted by the situation. |
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