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Panic on Board: Passenger on London Flight Shouts Slogans, Threatens to Blow Up Plane Mid-Air

Passengers on an EasyJet service from London Luton to Glasgow endured several terrifying minutes on Friday when a fellow traveler threatened to destroy the aircraft with a bomb.

Last Updated : Monday, 28 July 2025
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International News: Passengers on an EasyJet service from London Luton to Glasgow endured several terrifying minutes on Friday when a fellow traveler threatened to destroy the aircraft with a bomb. The episode, captured on mobile phones and quickly spread across social‑media platforms, has renewed debate over in‑flight security just as Britain approaches its peak summer‑holiday period.

Panic in the cabin

According to eyewitnesses, the Airbus A320 had reached cruising altitude when a 41‑year‑old man rose from seat 18C, shouted “Allahu Akbar” and “Death to America—Death to Trump,” and then claimed he was carrying an explosive device. Startled passengers pressed call buttons, while crew members implemented the airline’s unruly‑passenger protocol—calmly isolating the individual, restraining him with the help of two off‑duty police officers aboard, and alerting the cockpit. The captain notified air‑traffic control; armed police and bomb‑disposal specialists were ordered to meet the aircraft on arrival at Glasgow.

Multiple videos filmed from different rows show the suspect pacing the aisle and gesturing aggressively before the crew persuades him to sit. None of the clips reveals an actual weapon, but Scotland Yard’s counter‑terrorism command is analyzing the footage frame by frame to establish intent and possible links to extremist networks.

Arrest and investigation

The jet touched down safely at Glasgow International, where Police Scotland officers boarded, arrested the man under the Terrorism Act, and evacuated passengers in small groups for questioning. Specialist dogs and electronic‑sniffer equipment swept the cabin, overhead bins, and cargo hold; no explosives were found. A police statement issued later confirmed that “a 41‑year‑old male remains in custody on suspicion of communicating false information about a bomb and stirring racial hatred.” Formal charges are expected once detectives consult the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service.

Airline and regulatory response

EasyJet apologized for the distress yet praised its staff’s professionalism: “Our crew followed established safety procedures to the letter. We do not compromise on the security of customers or colleagues, and we are assisting police with their inquiries.” The Civil Aviation Authority said it would review the incident for any lessons that could tighten existing protocols. Aviation‑security analysts note that while physical threats are rare, disruptive behavior in UK airspace has risen 18 percent year‑on‑year, fuelled by a combination of alcohol misuse and online radicalization.

Trump in Scotland announces EU tariff deal

Coincidentally, US president Donald Trump was only 40 miles away at his Turnberry golf resort on the Ayrshire coast. In a brief press appearance alongside European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Trump claimed they had “hammered out an agreement that will scrap all punitive trans‑Atlantic tariffs and prevent a full‑scale trade war.” Details of the accord—said to cover steel, aluminum, and agricultural products—are due to be published in Brussels next week. Analysts suggest the pact, if ratified, could boost UK exporters caught in the crossfire of earlier US‑EU levies.

Wider implications

Friday’s twin developments underscore two distinct challenges: safeguarding aviation from lone‑actor threats and stabilizing a global trading system rattled by protectionism. For passengers on EZY 472, relief replaced fear within an hour, yet the emotional impact may linger far longer. For policymakers, the juxtaposition of a bomb scare with a breakthrough on tariffs is a reminder that security and economics often collide in unpredictable ways—demanding vigilance in the skies and diplomacy on the ground.