View Full Version : Anti-Terror Airline Cutlery


hkskyline
July 20th, 2006, 04:03 PM
British firm makes 'anti-terror' airline cutlery

LONDON, July 19, 2006 (AFP) - A British company on Wednesday launched a specially-designed stainless steel "anti-terror" cutlery range for use on board aircraft.

Arthur Price cutlery manufacturers and retailers claimed to be the first firm in the world to design such a set, targeted for use by business class customers who expect better than plastic cutlery.

The knives, forks and spoons have been created to exact specifications based on new British Department for Transport guidelines amid heightened security fears.

The knives have a rounded rather than a sharp end and measure no longer than six centimetres (2.36 inches), while the forks have prongs no longer than three centimetres.

Air India and Jet Airways have already placed orders and Emirates and the British Airports Authority are also considering the products, said Simon Price from the family company.

"Since the new guidelines from the Department of Transport have come in, all airlines have been forced to use plastic cutlery, which doesn't fit very well with a premium offering such as first or business class," he said.

"If you've paid that much for a flight, you don't expect to be eating with plastic knives and forks.

"By designing the first-ever set of stainless steel cutlery to meet the new specifications, we're providing airlines with a solution to this problem.

"Airlines can now offer their customers the premium standard of dining with real cutlery they would expect, whilst ensuring safety remains paramount."

samsonyuen
July 20th, 2006, 11:07 PM
Neat. I swear I still got metal on my last flight on AC in December!

Bertez
July 21st, 2006, 02:54 AM
^^You got metal cutlery on AC!?!?!....you lucky man;);)

classhopper
July 21st, 2006, 09:13 PM
Beware of some maniacs using pencil.

hkskyline
July 6th, 2009, 09:12 PM
Panama arrests Syrians on flight, no hijack
25 September 2007

PANAMA CITY, Sept 25 (Reuters) - Panamanian police arrested seven people, mostly Syrians, reported to have been acting suspiciously on a Copa Airlines plane from Cuba, but civil aviation authorities said the incident was not a hijacking.

Passengers on Copa flight 231 from Havana to Panama City feared the suspects were going to storm the cockpit armed with cutlery and told the crew, who alerted the Panamanian airport shortly before landing.

"This happened after flight personnel checked the metal utensils in the first class section and noticed that some were missing," the civil aviation authority said. "We want to deny that this was an attempted hijack."

The six Syrians and one Cuban were detained at Panama City's Tocumen airport.

"None of these people committed a violent act against the crew or passengers but they behaved suspiciously and tried to approach the cabin," Rolando Mirones, head of the national police, told a radio station.

Police surrounded the plane on the tarmac at the capital's Tocumen airport and one man was led out of the terminal building in handcuffs.

The Syrians were on their way to Haiti via Panama. Copa is headquartered in Panama.