Ryanair hijack charge won't stand up says, suspect's lawyer

The Swede suspected of planning to hijack a Ryanair plane bound for London was moved to a Stockholm jail today, as his lawyer…

The Swede suspected of planning to hijack a Ryanair plane bound for London was moved to a Stockholm jail today, as his lawyer predicted a hijacking charge would not hold up in a trial.

Mr Kerim Sadok Chatty (29) was moved from the police station in Vaesteraas, 60 miles northwest of the capital, where he had been held since last Thursday, when security officers at the local airport found a gun in his carry-on luggage as he was about to board the flight for Stansted.

Mr Chatty, whose mother is Swedish and father from Tunisia, was moved to Kronobergshaektet, a jail in the city's police headquarters. A district court judge yesterday ordered him held in custody as a prosecutor prepares preliminary charges of planning to hijack a plane and illegal possession of a weapon.

Mr Chatty's lawyer, Mr Nils Uggla, is under a gag order restricting his comments, but he said sabotage allegations were 'easy to refute' and the hijack charge, which carries a sentence of life in prison, was 'questionable.'

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'In my firm opinion, the hijack charge can never hold up in a trial. I think this will stay at illegal possession of a weapon,' Mr Uggla said today. He also strongly rejected any association with terrorism and said that Mr Chatty - a Muslim convert - admits having the gun as he prepared to board the flight but can explain why.

Mr Chatty's relatives said he opposed violence and that they were confident he had no hijacking plans and the presence of the gun in his bag must be due to a misunderstanding.

A brother referred to Mr Chatty's criminal record, which includes theft and assault convictions that he said was part of his 'old life.'

'Criminals carry guns as self defence,' the brother told a Swedish newspaper. 'He is a scatterbrain who loses things. He must have forgotten that he had put it in his toiletries bag.'

The brother said Mr Chatty had called his family ahead of his planned trip and offered to buy something for them while in England, although he declined to bring back alcohol or Cuban cigars for religious reasons.

His 19-year-old sister, Sarah, also said that her brother offered to buy her something on his trip. She said her brother was excited about his education at a flight school in the United States, but that his interest in flying was 'just a hobby.'

< b>AP