In 2016, Ben Innes boarded an Egyptair flight – number MS181 – flying from HBE Airport, Alexandria to Cairo Airport.
However, the plane ended up being hijacked by a man who appeared to be wearing a suicide belt.
The flight was diverted and landed safely Larnaca Airport, Cyprus, however, upon landing the alleged hijacker – named by Cypriot officials as Seif Eldin Mustafa – took hostages and refused to get off the plane.
And one of the passengers who remained onboard was Innes who decided to ask Mustafa for a photograph which quickly went viral after it was shared online.
Innes’ motive? Not because he particularly wanted to commemorate the moment or was a fan of the person he asked to take a photograph with, but in part, because he wanted ‘a chance to get a closer look’ at the supposed explosive device.
Although in an interview with The Sun, Innes admitted he wasn’t completely ‘sure why [he] did it’.
There was a five-hour standoff at Larnaca airport (BBC)
The Brit continued: “After about half an hour at Larnaca I asked for a photo with him as we were sitting around waiting. I thought, why not?
“I just threw caution to the wind while trying to stay cheerful in the face of adversity. I figured if his bomb was real I’d nothing to lose anyway, so took a chance to get a closer look at it.”
Innes explained he got one of the cabin crew to translate for him to ask the alleged hijacker if he could take a selfie.
“He just shrugged OK, so I stood by him and smiled for the camera while a stewardess did the snap,” Innes says. “It has to be the best selfie ever.”
The photograph led Innes to predict the device was fake – this suspicion later proving true – and so he then returned to his seat and plotted his ‘next move’.
Thankfully, Mustafa surrendered to authorities after a five-hour stand-off and no one was harmed.
He was sentenced to life in prison by an Egyptian court in 2019, charged with intimidation and threats to seize a plane and abduct its passengers for a terrorist purpose.