CNA Explains: What happens if there's a bomb threat on your flight?

SINGAPORE: Scoot flight TR16 & nbsp was forced to return to Singapore earlier this month due to a bomb threat.

A passenger from Australia was detained and accused of making unfounded criminal threats. He reportedly constantly informed the cabin crew that he was carrying a bomb.

A similar fear occurred on Singapore Airlines journey SQ33 from San Francisco last year when a bomb threat was made more than 12 hours after takeoff.

After the aircraft properly touched down at Changi Airport, the customer was severely warned and put in jail for slapping a cabin staff member.

According to & nbsp, a 2022 article from the Singapore Armed Forces PIONEER magazine, the Air Defence Task Group of the Republic of Singapore Air Force ( RSAF ) deals with more than 350 suspicious air threats on average each year.

How do protection measures occur thousands of feet above ground, and what can people anticipate when a turkey risk is made on an airplane? CNA learns the truth.

What transpires following a bomb threat?

According to Professor Jeffrey Charles Price, a professor of air and aircraft technology at the Metropolitan State University of Denver, carriers use global procedures to assess each risk.

The particular procedures are kept private. However, not every turkey risk is carried out. He emphasized that it’s critical to ascertain the nature of the threat because if it is, one could call in bomb hoaxes all day and shut down the aviation system.

Authorities will need to examine all the data at hand, including whether the risk was sent via phone call or email or by someone on the plane.

An airline may notify its regional aviation authority and the air traffic control once it determines that a threat calls for additional action.

According to PIONEER, the RSAF scrambled two fighter planes just days after being made aware of the bomb threat on SQ33.

To find out if the bomb threat was real, explosive ordnance disposal specialists from the 36th & nbsp, Battalion of the Singapore Combat Engineers & psc, also stood by on the scene.

According to an essay in PIONEER about a 2022 weather risk training, RSAF can also use artificial intelligence and data analytics to develop its response and set ground-based air defense systems and sensors on high alert.

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