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Libyan Arab Airlines Flight 1103 Libyan Arab Airlines Flight 1103 was a Boeing
727 with 10 crew and 147 passengers on board that disintegrated on 22 December 1992. On
the day of the accident Flight 1103 took off from Benina International Airport near Benghazi
on a domestic flight to Tripoli International Airport. At an altitude of 3,500 ft during
the aircraft's approach to Tripoli airport, something happened resulting in the aircraft
disintegrating, and the death of all 157 passengers and crew. The official explanation blamed
a collision with a Libyan Air Force MiG-23; the pilot and instructor of the MiG were imprisoned.
As of 2013, this accident remains the third-deadliest one involving a Boeing 727, behind All Nippon
Airways Flight 58 and Mexicana Flight 940. It is also the deadliest accident to occur
in Libya. Twenty years later, after the fall of Muammar
Gaddafi, Abdel Majid Tayari, the instructor in the MiG aircraft, challenged the official
version of events, claiming that Flight 1103 was deliberately destroyed, because he saw
the "detached tail" falling before his aircraft was knocked out for some unknown reason and
forced to eject along with his trainee. Ali Aujali, who served as a Libyan diplomat both
under Gaddafi and under the National Transitional Council, claims that Gaddafi ordered the flight
to be shot down to demonstrate the negative effects of international sanctions imposed
on Libya after the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. According to Aujali, the dictator originally
placed a bomb with a timer in the plane, but when this failed to explode, he "ordered the
plane to be knocked out of the sky" Notes
^ The aircraft was a Boeing 727-200 model; Boeing assigns a unique code for each company
that buys one of its aircraft, which is applied as a suffix to the model number at the time
the aircraft is built, hence "727-2L5" for a Boeing 727 built for Libyan Arab Airlines.