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Beirut boy bags business class seat after slipping airport security

Ticketless 13-year-old passes five security areas to board Middle East Airlines flight to Istanbul, sitting in business class before being discovered
The young boy managed to evade five layers of security checkpoints to board the Istanbul flight (AFP)
By AFP

Beirut's international airport said on Friday it was investigating how a teenage boy bypassed five layers of security, sneaked onto a flight, sat in business class, and made it to Turkey without a ticket or passport.

The boy boarded the Istanbul-bound plane operated by Lebanon's national carrier, Middle East Airlines, on Wednesday.

Local media said the boy was 13, and had managed to sneak through the multiple security points in the airport and board the plane, taking a seat in business class.

He was discovered by the crew onboard after the plane had already taken off, when they realised there were more passengers on the aircraft than on the manifest they had been given, local media said.

"Widescale investigations are ongoing into the details of the incident and how the child passed through the security checkpoints and boarded the plane without being detected," airport authorities said in a statement published by the official National News Agency.

It added that anyone found to have been "negligent" would be punished, and that security procedures were being strengthened "to prevent the recurrence of such an incident." 

His nationality and the purpose of his journey were not disclosed.

Passengers flying from Beirut's Rafik Hariri airport generally pass through at least five security points, including one before they enter the airport and a final examination of their documents by security at the departure lounge, before boarding flights.

Millions of passengers pass through the airport each year, and the incident comes after officials acknowledged that security at the facility needs work.

In March, Transport and Public Works Minister Ghazi Zaiter told a press conference that there was a $1.4 million shortfall in funds needed to bolster security measures at the airport.

The boy's adventure prompted criticism from Walid Jumblatt, a leading political figure and head of the Druze minority, who linked it to the country's ongoing political stalemate.

Lebanon has been without a president for more than two years, with its parliament locked in a standoff between two rival political blocs.

"All of this is due to the political and administrative chaos" in the country, he wrote on Twitter.

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