The Hijacking Where Everyone Smiled: Coşkun Aral’s Surreal Scoop
- Julian Beckett
- Sep 13
- 3 min read

Picture this: you’re on a flight, the usual dull hum of the engines in the background, when suddenly a voice declares, “From now on, Islam commands the plane.” Now imagine you’re not just a passenger, but a war correspondent with a camera in your lap. What do you do? If you’re Coşkun Aral, you take one of the most bizarre sets of hijacking photos in aviation history — where both the hijacker and the pilot are smiling.
A Flight That Took a Very Strange Turn
On 14 October 1980, Turkish Airlines flight 293, a Boeing 727 called Diyarbakır, was on its routine run from Munich to Ankara, with a stopover in Istanbul. It should have been a straightforward journey. Instead, four radical Islamist militants seized the aircraft, announcing their plan to divert it first to Iran and then on to Afghanistan to join the mujahideen.
For the passengers, the first sign that something was wrong came when the flight dragged on far longer than expected. “It was the 17:35 flight and the aircraft’s name was Diyarbakır,” Aral later recalled. “It takes 40 minutes to get to Ankara but after an hour and a half, we still weren’t there.”
When the hijackers finally made themselves known, they gave unusual instructions: women must cover their hair, if no scarf was available, a seat cover would do. “We wish no harm to anyone onboard,” they declared. “We’re fighting against the military fascist regime.”

A Reporter’s Instinct Kicks In
Among the passengers was Coşkun Aral, a Turkish war correspondent used to running toward chaos, not away from it. As the situation unfolded, he did something extraordinary. He picked up his camera and began taking photos, at first blindly, without even framing the shots.
One hijacker walked down the aisle, and Aral, true to his profession, asked if he could do an interview. Unsurprisingly, the man said no. But a little later, another hijacker approached him and ordered him to follow. It turned out to be the break of his career.

Inside the Cockpit
Aral was ushered into the cockpit where he witnessed a scene that has since passed into legend. A hijacker pointed a pistol at the pilot’s neck, grinning broadly. The pilot, instead of panicking, wore a calm smile of his own.
The hijackers even told Aral how they smuggled the gun on board. Their first idea had been to hollow out a copy of the Quran, but fearing sacrilege, they instead carved out space in an Arabic dictionary.
The mood was almost surreal. At one point, laughter broke out. The pilot reportedly joked to the gunman not to press the weapon against his neck, he might get tickled and crash the plane.
The photographs Aral snapped captured this bizarre atmosphere perfectly: men with weapons, yet smiling; a pilot in peril, yet composed. They are among the most unsettlingly human images of a hijacking ever taken.

The End of the Ordeal
The drama ended when the Turkish armed forces stormed the plane and subdued the hijackers. But for Aral, the ordeal didn’t finish there. Mistaken for one of the militants, he was arrested and held for four days in a Turkish prison before finally being cleared.
By then, his photos had already made their way into the world. What might have been just another grim story of air piracy became a strange, almost absurd episode in history, thanks to his lens.

Why the Photos Still Resonate
Hijackings are normally remembered in terms of fear, violence, and tragedy. Aral’s pictures show another side: the strange human moments that emerge even in crisis. The hijacker’s grin, the pilot’s composure, the surreal laughter in the cockpit, all captured in the space of a few clicks.
For Coşkun Aral, the scoop changed his life, propelling him to international recognition. For the rest of us, it’s a reminder that history isn’t just made of grand events, but of fleeting moments, strange expressions, and the courage of someone who keeps the camera rolling when everyone else freezes.
Sources
The New York Times – “Turkish Plane Hijacked by Islamic Group” (Oct 15, 1980)
Associated Press Archives (1980 coverage of the hijacking)
BBC News – Retrospectives on Turkish hijackings and 1980 political unrest
Coşkun Aral – Gördüğüm Dünya (Remzi Kitabevi, 2015)
Erik J. Zürcher – Turkey: A Modern History (I.B. Tauris, 2004)
Magnum Photos – Coşkun Aral portfolio
Getty Images – Photos of the 1980 hijacking by Coşkun Aral
Daily Sabah – Features on Coşkun Aral and the hijacking
Aviation Safety Network – Turkish Airlines flight incident archive
























