Air India flight leaves Iqaluit after Canadian militarysteps in - Action News
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Air India flight leaves Iqaluit after Canadian militarysteps in

Emergency Preparedness Minister Harjit Sajjan said he approved a request for the Canadian military resources, as the City of Iqaluit is not equipped to house these passengers".

Passengers were stranded inside the Iqaluit airport for 18 hours due to a bomb threat

Dozens of people stand inside airport security terminal.
211 passengers and crew on board Air India Flight 127 spent 18 hours confined inside Iqaluit Airport's international security zone on Tuesday. Their plane was grounded due to a bomb threat. (Samuel Wat/CBC)

Passengers on Air India's flight 127 have finally made their way to Chicago, after the Canadian military took exceptional measures to get them out of Nunavut.

An online bomb threat forced theplane, which was flying from New Delhi, to divert to Iqaluit early Tuesday morning.

A Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) Airbus A-330 from Ontario's CFB Trenton whisked the 211 passengers and crew out of Iqaluit late Tuesday night. Passengers spent 18 hours stranded at the Iqaluit airport's international security zone.

In a statement shared on X Tuesdaynight, Emergency Preparedness Minister Harjit Sajjan said he approved a request for the Canadian military resources, as Iqaluit was "not equipped to house these passengers" and the airline "hasn't found a solution."

In a statement to CBCNews, Canadian Armed Forces spokesperson Kened Sadiku said the militaryreceived a request for assistance from Public Safety Canada.

It determined that "rapid relocation of an RCAF aircraft to bring the passengers to their original destination in Chicago was the best way forward to all involved, including the passengers," according to Sadiku.

passengers board plane
A Royal Canadian Air Forces plane landed in Iqaluit around 9:20 p.m. on Tuesday and departed for Chicago just over 2 hours later. (Submitted by Deepika Chhillar)

For hours, the Air India plane wasn't checked for bombs, because Nunavut doesn't have explosives detective units, according to Nunavut RCMP. Specialists from outside the territory arrived later in the day.

Tuesday's incident was the fourth threat Air India said it's received in recent days, causing it to make the emergency landing in Iqaluit as a "precautionary measure."

While this incident is still under investigation, the previous three threats were hoaxes.

It's beenless than a yearsince Canada began investigating other threats against Air India.

'They abandoned us here'

CBC spoke to a number of passengers before their departure from Iqaluit, who said they were furious over what they said was "zero communication" from Air India.

"They abandoned us here and left," Stuti Mahajan said.

Like many other passengers, she left her belongings on the plane, as instructed by airline staff.

"There are family members back home who haven't heard from loved ones back home, because [the passengers] don't have their phones," Mahajan said.

"There was a lady waiting for her medication that was on the flight."

Deepika Chhillar and fellow passengers pose for photo.
While unable to leave Iqaluit Airport, Deepika Chhillar and fellow passengers were able to take a step in Nunavut on the tarmac. (Submitted by Deepika Chhillar )

Aruna Vallavhaaneni-Amin shared those frustrations, but also had praise for Iqaluit airport staff.

"They made sure we had games, a TV they had a physician, two nurses and a pharmacist," she said.

Deepika Chhillar found a silver lining in being cooped upinside the terminal.

"We actually made some human contact, we made friends, we have a WhatsApp group going," she said.

It isn't the first time passengers have been strandedin Iqaluit after a flight diversion. Past incidents includea Swiss International Air Linesplane in 2017 and a Delta Airlines plane that saw passengers accommodated at a local bar, in 2014.