Seven people still on board the hijacked Egyptian plane
CNN quoted Sherif Fathy Ateyya, the Egyptian Minister of Civil Aviation as saying that the hijacker's name is Seif El Din Mustafa, an Egyptian national and not Ibrahim Samaha, as told earlier.
"Officials don’t know whether or not the reports that the hijacker had a suicide belt on are true -- but we are treating it as if it is real,” he said.
Reports say the hijacker is now demanding the release of some female prisoners in Egypt.
The Airbus was hijacked on Tuesday morning when it was headed from Alexandria in Egypt to Cairo, the capital.
Conflicting reports are being received about the number of people on board the plane at the time it was hijacked -- Egypt's aviation ministry just said 55, Cyprus said earlier it was 72, and the airline said earlier that it was 81.
“It seems that 49 passengers have been released. We are doing our utmost in order for everyone to be released and safe and to give an end to this unprecedented (incident). In any case it is not something which has to do with terrorism," an official statement from the Cyprus government said.
Citing security sources, Cypriot state media said that the motives of the hijacker appeared personal and he had asked to contact his ex-wife, who lives in Cyprus.
"It is not something which has to do with terrorism," Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades told reporters.
Egypt's Civil Aviation Ministry earlier said that the hijacker had threatened the captain with blowing up a belt of explosives.
Local media then reported that the motives of the hijacker appeared personal, and he had asked to contact his ex wife, who lives in Cyprus.
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Cyprus has seen little militant activity for decades, despite its proximity to the Middle East.
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