Air France captain who stayed with hostages dies

IANS  |  London 

Michel Bacos, hailed as a hero for refusing to abandon his passengers when Palestinian and German hijackers seized the plane in 1976, died in Nice (France). He was 95.

Awarded the Legion d'Honneur, France's highest civilian order of merit, Bacos had said as "it would be impossible for me to leave my passengers, unimaginable", the reported on Wednesday.

said: "Michel was a hero. By bravely refusing to give in to anti-Semitism and barbarity, he brought honour to "

The youngest of the hijack survivors, Benny Davidson, said Bacos was a and had taken a leading position on behalf of all the hostages.

He said the pilot's fearless attitude served as an inspiration to the children caught in the hijack. "He set an example as a and how to behave even though all hell is breaking loose around you."

On June 27, 1976, the plane carrying 260 people from to had stopped in Athens, where the hijackers got on board and demanded it change course. They forced Bacos and his crew to fly to Benghazi in

The hijackers demanded release of 54 militants and a $5 million ransom.

The hostage crisis ended six days later at in when Israeli commandos stormed the plane.

--IANS

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First Published: Wed, March 27 2019. 17:54 IST