What happened to Flight 149? True story behind Sky documentary explained
The 367 passengers and crew of British Airways flight 149 were taken hostage after the plane landed at Kuwait International Airport on 2 August 1990, shortly after Iraq launched a full-scale invasion of its neighbour, prompting the start of the Gulf War. Some hostages were mistreated, seriously sexually assaulted and kept in near-starvation conditions.
Until recently, many accounts connected to the BA flight in August 1990 – particularly about when the government had known the invasion was under way and around claims that it had let it go ahead for intelligence gathering purposes – had been officially denied. The new documentary examines the accounts of passengers and crew, among others, about what happened that day.
A synopsis from Sky says: "On August 2, 1990, just after Saddam's forces storm Kuwait, a civilian flight unwittingly touches down in the middle of the warzone. The passengers and crew find themselves trapped, held as hostages by Saddam Hussein, becoming pawns in a rapidly escalating international crisis that will reshape the Middle East.
"For over three decades, the British government denied any prior knowledge of the invasion before the plane's ill-fated landing. Now, new information has come to light to challenge the official narrative and the surviving hostages are taking the British government and BA to court to seek justice and the truth."
Viewers will see some of the surviving hostages, Kuwaiti resistance fighters, investigative journalist Stephen Davis, and political insiders give their view on the events that unfolded. But what happened to BA Flight 149?
BA flight 149 took off from Heathrow on 1 August 1990 after hours of delays with 385 people on board (including 18 crew). They were bound for Subang International Airport, which at the time was the main travel hub for Kuala Lumpur.
On its journey to Malaysia, the flight was scheduled for a refuelling stop in Kuwait and another in Madras. But Iraq had launched an invasion of Kuwait in the early hours of 2 August and the plane never reached Subang as Hussein's forces had taken control of Kuwait International airport.
Some of the passengers had been due to finish their journey in Kuwait and left the plane, while those expecting to continue on were told that the airport had been closed for two hours. But when Iraqi forces reportedly bombed the runway and took out the control tower, the remaining people on board were evacuated from the plane, but then captured by the army and taken as hostages.
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The empty Flight 149 was later blown up on the runway, but it isn't clear who was responsible for destroying it – the US military may have been trying to prevent Iraq from using it.
Although the hostages were kept in the same hotel to begin with, they were later split up into smaller groups and held in different locations in Kuwait and Iraq. Their horrific ordeal included mental and physical abuse, rape and witnessing Kuwaiti civilians and soldiers killed by the army.
The plane's pilot Captain Richard Brunyate managed to escape with the Kuwaiti resistance, later explaining that his father was considered an enemy by Hussein and he worried what would happen to him if his name was recognised.
Some other small numbers of passengers and crew also managed to escape with the resistance at various points. One of the hostages died in captivity, and the others either escaped or were released in the weeks and months after their capture.
Women and children were given the chance to be released in late August, but the hostages left behind were used by the Iraqi army as human shields whilst moving between locations. The last remaining hostages were released in December 1990.
British Airways immediately complained that they had been allowed to fly into Kuwait after the invasion had begun, arguing that it should have been designated as a war zone by the Foreign Office to redirect the stopover.
Then-prime minister Margaret Thatcher claimed that the flight had arrived into Kuwait hours before the invasion, but many of the passengers and crew reported hearing gunfire, tanks and loud bangs when they landed in Kuwait City.
The airline has awarded damages to some of the groups of passengers who took court action against them. However, despite the British government denying trying to influence BA in any way to fly into Kuwait, BA have repeatedly made statements that they were told by the government that it was safe to fly there.
A 2007 documentary revealed that other flights had been diverted away from Kuwait during the journey and that news of the invasion could have been passed on to Flight 149 at least an hour before it landed for refuelling. The documentary also included claims from an anonymous former SAS soldier who claimed that he and his team had been put on board the flight for intelligence gathering on the invasion.
In 2021, then foreign secretary Liz Truss admitted that the government at the time had misled BA by not passing on a warning to the airline. A group of passengers are now suing the government and the airline over the claims that the flight was allowed to land in Kuwait as part of an SAS mission, with the new Sky documentary telling their story.
The documentary airs on Sky Documentaries on Wednesday, 11 June at 9pm and is then repeated over the following week.
It can also be streamed on Sky and NOW.
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Newsweek
8 hours ago
- Newsweek
How Rock Climbing Builds Muscle, Mindfulness and Community
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. As a relatively new climber, I look up and think, There's no way I'm getting up this. The limestone arches overhead in swirls of gray and rusty brown. Look closely, though, and it is carved and pitted with features where white chalk marks from the fingers of previous climbers show the ghost of a way up. The only way I can climb is to start. To think of the next places for my feet and for my hands, not the finish point 65 feet above—or anything else. I listen only to my breathing and my belay buddy, holding my life through the belay device on the rope between our harnesses. Clipping the rope to bolts set in the cliff face, I maneuver over a jutting fold. It goes surprisingly well for 50 feet. Then the footholds seem to run out. And the handholds. My fingers press on dusty wrinkles of rock, but my arms are bent and burning. My heart drums in my ears. I know what comes next. There's just time to yell: "Falling." My experienced belayer, Sophie, catches me on the rope as I jolt to a stop a few feet below where I was clinging on. CLOSE X I rest my tired arms and racing mind. Look around. I see another way up, to the right. No rush. Try again. This time I make it to the anchor point at the top. I feel relief and no little sense of achievement. I'm sure the view from the top here in Geyikbayiri, Turkey, is fantastic, but right now I'm happy for Sophie to lower me to the ground. I'll be back another day to "send" the route without a break. Over the past year, I have joined the rapidly increasing community taking up climbing: whether at indoor gyms or outdoor crags as people of all ages and abilities discover a sport that offers a more interesting way to get fit than lifting heavy things up and down and that also improves flexibility and balance. According to scientific studies, it can offer additional benefits for mental health. "When you become a climber, you're instantly part of a tribe—people who share your passion. That makes it easier to form and maintain meaningful relationships, which are vital for mental health," British professional climber and mind coach Hazel Findlay, 36, told Newsweek. Matthew Tostevin Matthew Tostevin Matthew Tostevin "There's also the problem-solving element. Climbing engages the brain as well as the body, which keeps us present and focused—sometimes even allowing us to access flow states. And then there's the fear. Climbing regularly puts us in situations where we confront fear and learn to manage our stress responses. That emotional regulation—the ability to stay calm and centered under pressure—is incredibly transferable to all areas of life." A study published in 2024 said climbing "may offer protective benefits against certain anxiety disorders among adolescents." Another analysis published in 2022, involving a total of 568 people, concluded that therapeutic climbing offers "a safe and effective treatment for improving physical/mental/social well-being"—while noting that more research was needed. And, of course, it's fun. A man hanging in mid air by a single rope is shadowed by the narrow canyon he is in, but behind him the red sandstone cliffs are washed in late evening light. A man hanging in mid air by a single rope is shadowed by the narrow canyon he is in, but behind him the red sandstone cliffs are washed in late evening light. Getty 'It's More Safe Than To Drive a Car in Traffic' A quote often attributed to Ernest Hemingway is: "There are only three sports: bullfighting, motor racing and mountaineering; all the rest are merely games." And climbing doesn't require either a car or a bull and a readiness to inflict animal cruelty. Risks can also be minimized. Many people start with bouldering at a climbing gym. There are no ropes and thick mats provide a soft landing when you fall off holds set on the wall. Outdoor boulderers carry their pads with them. Sport climbing involves higher routes with fixed bolts. You need a rope—and usually a partner. The lead climber takes the rope up to the anchor point and other climbers may then climb on "top rope," which is even safer. Traditional or "trad climbing" doesn't have the fixed bolts so you need to bring your own safety devices. "You find the proper instructor and trainer, it's 100 percent safe. It's more safe than to drive a car in the traffic," said Geyikbayiri climbing instructor and guide Volkan Özkan, a stickler for making sure every knot is tied neatly as well as safely. "But you need an experienced instructor, belayer, trainer or friends." Large group of climbers at Paklenica, Croatia. Large group of climbers at Paklenica, Croatia. Matthew Tostevin In a separate category is free solo climbing—as demonstrated by Alex Honnold in the Oscar-winning 2018 documentary Free Solo. Done without any safety gear, it is extraordinarily dangerous. While criticized by some climbers for potentially encouraging people to take excessive risk, Honnold's ascent of the 3,000-foot El Capitan in California's Yosemite National Park is nonetheless seen as one of the factors that raised interest in climbing, along with The Dawn Wall, a 2017 movie on the first ascent—with ropes—of one incredibly challenging route on El Cap. Another factor was the inclusion of climbing in the Olympics. Sport climbing made its debut at the Tokyo Olympics in 2020. Last year in Paris, there were two sets of medals for speed climbing and then for lead climbing and bouldering combined. Climbing will be back at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. Cliffs for climbing at Geyikbayiri, Turkey. Cliffs for climbing at Geyikbayiri, Turkey. Matthew Tostevin "I think the biggest change in like over 10 years is the rise of the boulder gyms," said Fleur Derks, who co-owned a climbing gym in the Netherlands before moving to Geyikbayiri, where she co-owns the Flying Goat camp for climbers. "Many people from the boulder gyms also started climbing after they had seen how nice it was, and so the whole climbing community grew actually quite extensively." "Maybe climbers in the past were always a little bit nature lovers-type of people, but at the moment, it's very wide, like you see, many different people come to the gyms," she told Newsweek. Being able to do one-finger pullups—or for that matter being able to do pullups at all—is not a requirement for starters. The Ultimate Disney Fan Event presented by VISA - brings together all the worlds of Disney under one roof for three packed days of presentations, pavilions, experiences, concerts, sneak peeks, shopping, and more. The event,... The Ultimate Disney Fan Event presented by VISA - brings together all the worlds of Disney under one roof for three packed days of presentations, pavilions, experiences, concerts, sneak peeks, shopping, and more. The event, which takes place September 9, 10, and 11 at the Anaheim Convention Center, provides fans with unprecedented access to Disney films, series, games, theme parks, collectibles, and celebrities. More The Walt Disney Company via Getty The Global Growth of Climbing Climbing can be for everyone, though not all will climb at a high level, says Findlay. She herself is getting back into the top level after becoming a mother. "From the outside, it might look like I've bounced back—but it hasn't been that simple. It's been hard, but it's also been deeply rewarding. Having a child is amazing and climbing through this period has helped me process, learn and grow in ways I didn't expect," she said. The total number of people participating in climbing in the United States reached 10.35 million in 2021, the last year for which data was available, according to Statista. The Climbing Business Journal recorded 875 open commercial climbing gyms in North America in 2024, a net increase of 49 on the previous year. The average annual growth rate in the U.S. was more than 6 percent over a decade. Sam Watson of USA scores a world record time of 4.74 seconds against Reza Alipour Shenazandifard of Iran in the Small Final on day thirteen of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Le Bourget Sport... Sam Watson of USA scores a world record time of 4.74 seconds against Reza Alipour Shenazandifard of Iran in the Small Final on day thirteen of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Le Bourget Sport Climbing Venue on August 08, 2024 in Paris, France. More Patrick Khachfe/Getty The growth of climbing is a worldwide phenomenon, with 636 climbing gyms in China by 2023—a rise of more than 30 percent in a single year, according to the Chinese Mountaineering Association. The number of rock climbing-related posts on the Xiaohongshu social media platform rose 30-fold between 2019 and 2023, it said. The growth also means a boon for equipment makers. "In the last five years, we've now seen a lot of these gym climbers transition to climbing outside because of mainstream media coverage of the pro athletes in this sport. This has created an uptick in the amount of people we see at popular climbing areas," said Benjamin Eaton, national marketing manager of the Sport Division of Petzl for the United States and Canada. "This influx of new climbers has made it so that gear companies are investing in more entry-level gear when they used to mainly focus on high-end, innovative gear. Gear companies are also seeing opportunities to expand product lines to be more inclusive to various ages and body types." Brooke Raboutou of Team United States climbs during the Women's Boulder & Lead - Final Lead on day fifteen of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Le Bourget Sport Climbing Venue on August 10, 2024... Brooke Raboutou of Team United States climbs during the Women's Boulder & Lead - Final Lead on day fifteen of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Le Bourget Sport Climbing Venue on August 10, 2024 in Paris, France. More Michael Reaves/Getty Pluses and Minuses The rise in climbing can have downsides for the environment, however, with pressure on the most popular areas. Climbing can speed up the erosion of rock faces and climbers can disturb rare wildlife and plants. According to a 2024 study, opening a new climbing route can reduce the number of plant species at the site by more than a third. The magnesium from the white dust that climbers use to improve their grip can change the chemical balance of the environment. "It's amazing to see so many people discovering climbing. But that growth creates some serious challenges for places like Red Rock or Indian Creek—more climbers on routes, more cars in the lots, more pressure on the land," Free Solo climber Honnold posted on social media recently in support of the Access Fund, a U.S. group working to protect and care for land for climbers. Red Rock Canyon in Nevada and Indian Creek in Utah are among the top climbing locations in the U.S. The growth of rock climbing also brings changes to communities such as the one in Geyikbayiri, where the influx of climbers for most of the year—few climb during the hottest summer months—has brought new activity to a town sitting quietly among olive and orange orchards some 30 minutes' drive from the beach resort of Antalya. While not everyone in Geyikbayiri may benefit directly from climbing, it now supports an ecosystem of businesses and jobs. Matthew Tostevin climbs a route at Geyikbayiri, Turkey. Matthew Tostevin climbs a route at Geyikbayiri, Turkey. Mizuki Soma "This limestone here that we have, it's endless. We have, like, 1,500 routes here, and there are more potentially," said Özkan, who is a part of the team at Bolting Antalya that bolts new routes and rebolts old ones to keep them safe. "You can never take the risk to zero, but we are trying to decrease it to this setup here is a perfect climbing area and the season here is nine months. In the future, we are trying to open the new sectors in shadow so it will be longer than that," he said. I hope to be back to try them. After a while, anxiety over climbing may be replaced by anxiety over not climbing enough.


National Geographic
2 days ago
- National Geographic
Where is Noah's Ark? Here's why it will never be found
A painting of Noah's Ark. The Old Testament tale has not only inspired countless generations of artists, but also more than a century of 'scientific' attempts to locate remains of the fabled vessel. Painting by Simon de Myle via Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty For more than a century, people have sought the precise location of Noah's Ark. Archaeologists say it's a fool's errand. Noah's Ark is among the best known and most captivating of all Old Testament stories. After creating humans, God became so displeased with them that he struck Earth with an all-encompassing flood to wipe them out. But there was one noteworthy (and seaworthy) exception: the biblical patriarch and his family. Accompanied by pairs of each of the planet's animals, all rode out the deluge in an enormous wooden vessel. For people who accept the religious text as a historically accurate account of actual events, the hunt for archaeological evidence of the Ark is equally captivating. It's inspired some intrepid faithful to comb the slopes of Mount Ararat and other sites in eastern Turkey for traces of the wooden vessel among the rock formations. In 1876, for example, British attorney and politician James Bryce climbed the mountain, where biblical accounts say the Ark came to rest. There he claimed a piece of wood that 'suits all the requirements of the case' was in fact a piece of the vessel. More modern 'discoveries' exclaiming 'Noah's Ark found' take place on a regular basis. Most recently, a group called Noah's Ark Scans, led by Andrew Jones, claims that soil samples taken from the Durupinar site in eastern Turkey contains organic matter that differs from the surrounding area. However, many argue the boat-shaped site is a natural geological formation. A shepherd tends his flock near Mount Ararat in eastern Turkey. Many people have looked for evidence of the Ark on the mountain's slopes, despite the fact that the Book of Genesis describes the Ark as coming to rest in a yet-unidentified range of mountains in western Asia. Photograph by John Stanmeyer, Nat Geo Image Colllection Such searches for the Ark site draw everything from exasperation to disdain from academic archaeologists and biblical scholars. 'No legitimate archaeologist does this,' says National Geographic Explorer Jodi Magness, an archaeologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, of modern searches for evidence of Noah. 'Archaeology is not treasure hunting,' she adds. 'It's not about finding a specific object. It's a science where we come up with research questions that we hope to answer by excavation.' (Which animals were on Noah's Ark? Here are a few theories.) Was the Old Testament flood fact or fiction? Stories of destructive floods and those who survive them predate the Hebrew Bible, the oldest parts of which are thought to have been written in the 8th century B.C. Legends about a deluge that destroys civilization at the behest of a supernatural deity appear in multiple Mesopotamian texts. They run the gamut, from the Epic of Gilgamesh written around the early second millennium B.C. to a recently deciphered Babylonian cuneiform tablet from about 1750 B.C. describing how the ark was built. Flood and ark accounts very similar to that of the Old Testament predate biblical accounts. One from the early second millennium B.C. Epic of Gilgamesh, shown in this Assyrian depiction, was recorded more than a thousand years before the Bible. Photograph by CM Dixon, Print Collector/Getty Could these flood myths be based in fact? 'There does seem to be geological evidence that there was a major flood in the Black Sea region about 7,500 years ago,' says National Geographic Explorer Eric Cline, an archaeologist at George Washington University. But scientists disagree on the extent of that event, just as historians of the era differ on whether real life inspired writings about a deluge. It seems likelier that floods were simply experienced in different places and at different times—and that those events naturally made their way into the world's oral and written lore, like the Genesis flood narrative. (What do the Dead Sea Scrolls reveal about the origins of Christianity?) Where is Noah's Ark? It's complicated. Scholars differ on the precise location of Noah's Ark according to the Hebrew Bible. In the Book of Genesis, the ark came to rest 'upon the mountains of Ararat' located in the ancient kingdom of Urartu, an area that now includes Armenia and parts of eastern Turkey and Iran—not the single, iconic peak that bears its name today. 'There's no way we can determine where exactly in the ancient Near East it occurred,' says Magness. Both Cline and Magness add that even if artifacts from the Ark have been or will be found, they could never be conclusively connected to historical events. 'We have no way of placing Noah, if he really existed, and the flood, if there really was one, in time and space,' says Magness. 'The only way you could determine that would be if you had an authentic ancient inscription.' Even then, she points out, such an inscription could refer to another Noah or another flood. That hasn't stopped the proliferation of pseudoarchaeology that upholds the Bible as literal truth. The fruitless searches are often aligned with adherents of 'young-earth creationism,' the belief that, despite evidence to the contrary, Earth is only thousands of years old. (Inside the search for the oldest pieces of Earth) Same evidence, very different conclusions Such groups use secular archaeological evidence to bolster their literal interpretation of Scripture—and simply disregard or attempt to disprove evidence to the contrary. But they don't all share the same tactics. Answers In Genesis, a self-described apologetics ministry that focuses on scientific issues and even runs a Noah's Ark-themed amusement park in Kentucky, acknowledges the ubiquity of flood-related myths beyond the Old Testament story of Noah, and even concedes that the Ark could never be found. 'We do not expect the Ark to have survived and been available to find after 4,350 years,' says Andrew A. Snelling, a geologist and Director of Research for Answers In Genesis who has spent decades attempting to prove Earth's youth. Snelling differs from archaeologists, however, about why the vessel's remains will never be found. 'With no mature trees available for Noah and his family to build shelters after they got off the Ark, there is every reason to expect they dismantled the Ark (which they didn't need anymore) to salvage timber from it,' he says. While the ministry does not rule out the potential of one day finding the Ark, Snelling rues what he calls 'questionable claims' by Ark-seekers that 'blunt the potential impact of a true discovery.' For Magness, who currently leads excavations at a late-Roman synagogue in Galilee. the search for Noah's Ark not only confuses the public, but diminishes excitement about actual archaeological finds, even ones that offer support for parts of the Bible, such as the existence of the House of David. Cline says when he was younger, he attempted to rebut the purported biblical evidence that enchants the public year after year. Eventually, he quit. Now he focuses on both his expeditions and translating his research for those willing to accept the results of the scientific process. 'People are gonna believe what they want to believe,' he sighs. That won't change any time soon. For now, he's focused on unearthing an 18th-century B.C. Canaanite palace at Tel Kabri in what is now northern Israel. 'For us, [the floor] is incredibly important, because it shows international relations and contacts from almost 4,000 years ago,' he says. 'It's not Noah's Ark, but it's a painted floor,' the archaeologist says, 'which is good enough for me.' This article originally published on November 22, 2022. It was updated on June 30, 2025.


New York Post
2 days ago
- New York Post
What happens if a plane's emergency exit door is opened midair? A pilot reveals the truth
Is it opening the door to disaster? Bum-rushing the emergency exit on a plane has seemingly become a go-to move among those looking to make trouble at 30,000 feet. Now, air experts are weighing in on what happens when mile-high hellions attempt to activate the doorway to heaven — and the outcome is not so good. Dan Bubb, Ph.D., a former airline pilot and current aviation safety expert, explained that opening the emergency exit — which he noted is for evacuations — on the ground will cause the door to open and an inflatable slide to deploy, Reader's Digest reported. Advertisement That is because the air pressure in both the cabin and outside is equal, thereby allowing passengers to disengage the locking mechanism. 3 American Airlines First Officer Steve Scheibner explained that to open the emergency door mid-flight, one would need to be able to lift 25,000 pounds Media_Works – While generally activated by a flight attendant during an emergency, the escape chute has notably been deployed by bozo passengers and crew members during non-emergencies as well. Advertisement In December, a flight in Spain had to be evacuated after a panicky male passenger released the emergency slide while the plane was idling on the runway in stifling heat. A month later, a bumbling British Airways crew member cost the airline $122,000 after accidentally deploying the safety ramp. And in perhaps the most infamous example in 2010, then-JetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater announced he was quitting, grabbed two beers from the drinks cart, opened the door and disappeared down the slide. 3 If someone did manage to breach the hatch inflight, 'it would create a decompression situation where the oxygen masks would fall from the ceiling, and the pilot would have to put the plane in a dive to an altitude of 14,000 feet within four minutes,' Bubb explained. GDM photo and video – Advertisement But what happens when someone tries to pull the same trick in the sky? Absolutely nothing. That phenomenon is due to the high pressure differential between the inside and outside of the aircraft — which effectively seals the plug-style doors in place. 'The air pressure inside of the plane is much greater than the pressure outside of the plane,' explained Budd. 'This makes it exceedingly difficult to open the door.' Advertisement American Airlines First Officer Steve Scheibner explained that to open the emergency door midflight, one would need to be able to lift 25,000 pounds, Travel + Leisure magazine reported. 'Once this door gets pressurized in flight, it's nine pounds per square inch,' the flyboy — who goes by Captain Steeeve on TikTok — said. If someone did manage to breach the hatch inflight, 'it would create a decompression situation where the oxygen masks would fall from the ceiling, and the pilot would have to put the plane in a dive to an altitude of 14,000 feet within four minutes,' Bubb explained. Also preventing a midair evacuation is the door's locking mechanism, which engages on the runway when the airplane has attained a speed of 92 miles per hour, according to Scheibner. It's then virtually impossible to manually unlock the door until the aircraft slows down again. Coincidentally, the Federal Aviation Administration started requiring passenger aircraft to come equipped with this safety mechanism in 1972 in response to a spate of airplane hijackings in the 1960s and 1970s. 3 Those who attempt to open a hatch in-flight will be subject to arrest. luengo_ua – However, that safeguard hasn't stopped bozos from attempting to monkey with the airlock inflight. Advertisement Last month, an out-of-control passenger aboard a flight from Tokyo to Houston allegedly tried to open a cabin door midair, forcing panicked travelers to restrain him as the plane made an emergency landing. Despite the difficulty of budging the seemingly impregnable sky portal, at least one passenger appears to have succeeded. In 2023, an Asiana Airlines passenger opened an emergency door moments before the plane landed in Daegu, South Korea, sparking panic among the 194 flyers in the wind-swept cabin. Advertisement Thankfully, the plane was able to touch down safely, and no one was seriously injured, although a dozen were taken to the hospital and treated for hyperventilation. Geoffrey Thomas, an aviation expert with Airline Ratings, described the incident as 'very bizarre' because 'technically, it's not possible to open those doors in flight.' In most cases, attempting to open the escape hatch can result in a flight diversion and the arrest of the passenger responsible. Advertisement In 2024, a flight attendant broke their leg while attempting to restrain a passenger who attempted to open a door midflight. In light of the crewmember's injury, the man was charged with a federal crime, and, if convicted, could face 20 years in prison. At the very least, those attempting an unauthorized evacuation will likely earn themselves a nonstop trip onto a no-fly list.