Man charged with hijacking one day after flights grounded at Vancouver Airport
Shaheer Cassim, who was born in 1986, has been charged with one count of hijacking, according to court records online. RCMP said that his next court appearance will be on July 22.
On Tuesday afternoon, police arrested a man after a small Cessna 172 plane landed at the airport around 1:45 p.m. PT on Tuesday.
They said that they had received reports around 1 p.m. that the plane had been hijacked from Vancouver Island before entering Vancouver International Airport (YVR) airspace.
No one was injured. RCMP say the man they arrested was the sole occupant of the plane.
A YVR spokesperson told CBC News on Tuesday that flights were grounded for just under 40 minutes as a result of the alleged hijacking, and nine flights had to be diverted to other airports.
Few details were released by police on Tuesday. Richmond RCMP told CBC News on Wednesday that its federal counterparts had taken over the investigation.
Under the Criminal Code, a charge of hijacking can be laid for a variety of reasons — which include confining people on board an aircraft against their will, transporting them to an unscheduled location against their will, or causing an aircraft to deviate from its flight plan by using force or threats.
A spokesperson for the Public Prosecution Service of Canada said that the hijacking also constitutes a terrorist offence and a terrorist activity under two sections of the Criminal Code.
In a statement on Wednesday evening, police said that Cassim allegedly threatened a flight instructor and hijacked the plane at Victoria International Airport.
"Investigators have determined the suspect acted with an ideological motive to disrupt airspace," said Sgt. Tammy Lobb, though she did not specify what the motive was.
One in a million case, flying club says
According to the Victoria International Airport, the aircraft is operated by the Victoria Flying Club.
Club president Colin Williamson said that the club operated 12,000 flights per year, and this was the first case of its kind he had encountered, dubbing it "truly a one in a million situation."
"We've had, you know, people bang a wing tip into another plane, you know, fender benders, if you will, hit marker lights ... I mean, all of that stuff happens when you run a flight school because you are teaching people to fly," he said.
"But this? No, never. It's just completely out of the blue."
Williamson said that he was limited in what information he could share with the media on Wednesday, and that RCMP were currently examining the plane before it could be given back to the flight club.
The flight club president told CBC News that an instructor was required to check out the keys to the plane, and the man who allegedly hijacked the plane showed up, saying he wanted to be a passenger on a plane.
However, Williamson did not go into detail about what happened after the instructor checked out the keys or whether the instructor was threatened, though he did confirm the man was not a member of the flight club.
The Victoria Flying Club operates many types of passenger services, which include sightseeing tours, charter flights and discovery flights where a student pilot goes along with an instructor.
Williamson said the club was looking after its staff and offering counselling, though he did not specify exactly what type of flight was involved in Tuesday's alleged hijacking incident.
"It wasn't in any way anything special and ... one of our normal training planes that we fly all the time," he said.
"Our people, I'm really proud of them," he added. "Everybody really pulled together ... because it's distressing, you know, because we're like family to each other."
NORAD scrambles fighter jets
A spokesperson for the Canadian Armed Forces told CBC News in a statement that the North American Aerospace Defence Command (NORAD) scrambled U.S. F-15 fighter jets in response to the alleged hijacking on Tuesday.
NORAD said that they were deployed after reports that the civilian pilot of a "small general aviation aircraft" was not communicating with air traffic controllers.
However, the flight had landed before fighter jets intercepted it.
The spokesperson did not say where the fighter jets departed from.
"NORAD F-15s responded to this incident as they were closest and able to be on scene the fastest," it wrote. "CF-18s were in the process of responding, but the incident resolved before any NORAD assets arrived on station."
'Some type of protest'
In air traffic communications around the time of the alleged hijacking, unidentified air traffic controllers are heard saying just after 1:30 p.m. PT on Tuesday that the pilot of the Cessna "has indicated within 10 minutes he plans to land and expects to be arrested."
"There is a Cessna over the airport, around 500 feet, some type of protest," an unidentified air traffic controller is heard saying on another recording.In another air traffic control recording, controllers were asked when the last time something like this occurred.
The answer was, "Maybe the '70s."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Teacher says online misogyny seeping into classrooms in 'frightening' ways
"Shut up and make me a sandwich." "I don't have to listen to you, go get the man in charge." Those are some of the comments one Halifax teacher says she has heard from some of her male students in recent years. Christine Emberley said the comments range from sarcastic sniping about a woman's place in society to "grotesquely sexual" remarks. Sometimes, the students refuse to make eye contact, listen or acknowledge her. "It's frightening," she said. Emberley has been teaching for nearly two decades and says the sexist and offensive remarks started cropping up only in the last few years. She teaches drama in classrooms across all grade levels and said these attitudes are more common among boys in junior high and high school. She is not the only one noticing this rhetoric in the classroom. Luc Cousineau is a researcher at Dalhousie University and director of the Canadian Institute for Far-Right Studies. In a recent study, he analyzed what teachers said about their experiences on Reddit, a social media platform that hosts discussion boards for various communities, by filtering the teachers' discussion board for posts that mention Andrew Tate. Tate has millions of followers on social media, with a message of unapologetic misogyny that has drawn boys and young men to the luxurious lifestyle he projects. The 38-year-old influencer is also facing 10 charges in Britain related to three women that include rape, actual bodily harm, human trafficking and controlling prostitution for gain. A major component of Tate's rhetoric is the belief that women are subordinate to men. According to the latest data from Statistics Canada, just over 75 per cent of teachers are female in Canada. Cousineau said his research, published in the peer-reviewed journal Gender and Education, showed misogynistic comments from students are disrupting learning environments, as teachers deal with sexist and degrading comments, defiance and male-supremacist sentiments. "Teachers expressed that this content and these things that students were saying in class were making them feel unsafe," he said. Cousineau said boys are exposed to misogynistic influences, even if they don't want to be, because they're suggested by social media algorithms. He said not all content from the influencers focuses on misogyny. They also post about bodybuilding, politics or feeling misunderstood. "If young people are engaging with the messaging that doesn't feel contentious, then they're going to get that other [misogynistic] content as well." Lance McCready is an associate professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. He said the issue of so-called "manosphere" influencers comes up in classrooms of soon-to-be-teachers. "It's definitely on a lot of people's minds," he told CBC News. He said young men and boys are looking for representation and relatable role models; they want to feel like their voice is heard. He said there needs to be more positive representations of masculinity for boys early in childhood. "We have to start having these conversations and discussing it in our curriculum, in our family," said McCready. "I would like to see more men willing to have these conversations." Responding to misogyny from students When a student makes a misogynistic comment, Emberley said she responds by saying it's inappropriate and talks to the student. "The way that we need to deal with it, from my perspective, is curiosity and empathy," she said. "Shame is just going to make somebody double down on that belief. "They need guidance. They need someone who's offering an attractive or a palatable alternative to what they're consuming online." Depending on the severity of the comment, the consequences can escalate, Emberley said. In her experience, some students adjust their behaviour after an intervention while others don't. "When you have a kid who's really into that messaging, are they even going to listen?" Emberley said it's a minority of boys who hold these anti-women opinions, but other boys rarely speak out against their peers. "Not everybody is comfortable doing that, so sometimes it ends up feeling like the majority." Emberley said she's heard from female students about their peers' behaviour. "There's a lot of helplessness that they're feeling and a lot of disgust." Emberley said teachers and parents should talk to boys about what they're seeing online, but the issue requires a larger solution. She said creating a framework to guide teachers' responses to misogyny would help, but the process is falling behind the growth of the problem. Curriculum updates around gender-based violence are ongoing for Nova Scotia schools following recommendations in the Mass Casualty Report in response to the province's 2020 mass shooting. More changes to the curriculum are expected to be implemented in the fall. Cousineau said social conditions, media and tech infrastructure make it easy for boys to latch onto these ideas. He said solutions will require more research. "We're talking about a global phenomenon here," he said. "If we are going to only have country-by-country or province-by-province actions, then we're fighting a battle on a different playing field." Cornelia Schneider, an associate professor at the Mount Saint Vincent University department of education, specializes in inclusive practices in education. She said this behaviour is likely amplified by the success of political movements, like MAGA. "These voices, that might always have existed but were more underground, now have a legitimate outlet and are allowed and applauded." She said responses to the influence of social media can only be so effective because of how rapid its presence has grown. She said we're only learning about the effects of social media "in real time." "[It's] this tool that we're developing and using at the same time." MORE TOP STORIES
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
1 dead in southwest Calgary shooting, police say
A woman is dead following a shooting in the southwest Calgary community of Haysboro on Saturday, police said. Police found a woman in her 20s suffering from what are believed to be gunshot wounds at approximately 4:30 p.m. in the 8700 block of Horton Road S.W., according to the Calgary Police Service. First responders attempted to save the woman's life, but she was declared deceased at the scene, police said. They added that they were responding to reports of gunshots in a house's parking garage. Police believe the shooting was targeted. An investigation by the force's Homicide Unit is ongoing, and as of Saturday afternoon no suspect was in custody. An autopsy of the woman's body has been scheduled for Tuesday, police said. The Calgary Police Service is asking anybody who witnessed the shooting or has footage of the area at the time of the incident to contact police by calling 403-266-1234.


CBS News
11 hours ago
- CBS News
Pilot injured after planes collide at Hollister airport
A pilot was taken to a hospital after two planes collided at the airport in Hollister on Saturday, police said. Officers responded to the Hollister Municipal Airport after receiving a report that two planes had collided and that one plane was on fire. By the time officers arrived, the Hollister Fire Department had already located one plane on the runway and contained the fire. The pilot sustained unknown injuries and was taken to a hospital. After speaking with witnesses, police said they located a second pilot who was uninjured. Officers said they observed minor damage to the plane. The Federal Aviation Administration will be taking over the investigation.