Police
are questioning a man about an air rage incident on a flight
from Cape Town to London.
South African Airways (SAA) said a man had tried to shoulder-barge
the cockpit door of a Boeing 747 six hours into the flight
from Cape Town.
A 35-year-old British man was arrested by the Metropolitan
Police as soon as Flight SA 220 touched down at Heathrow's
Terminal One at 0530 BST on Wednesday.
Police are continuing to question the man on Thursday,
in relation to alleged criminal damage.

He was on some habit forming narcotics
and suffered a panic attack or withdrawal symptoms

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SAA spokesman
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The cockpit door was locked and the man was restrained
by passengers and crew and handcuffed for the five hours
remaining of the flight.
A doctor on the flight examined the man and thought he
had suffered panic attacks due to narcotic withdrawal.
An SAA spokesman said: "He suddenly left his seat
and proceeded to the upper deck of the plane.
"Once on the upper deck he ran down the aisle and
shoulder charged the locked cockpit door and attempted to
gain entry into the flight deck.
The
cockpit doors were kept locked
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"Passengers and crew overpowered him.
"The 317 passengers, flight deck and cabin crew were
never in danger.
"A doctor examined him and reported that he probably
suffered a panic attack.
"He was on some habit forming narcotics and suffered
a panic attack or withdrawal symptoms.
'Strict rules'
"He was handcuffed throughout the rest of the flight
and was handed over to the Metropolitan Police in London
when it arrived."
The spokesman added: "SAA has a strict policy in which
cockpit doors are locked at all times."
A Scotland Yard spokesman said: "Officers were called
to a runway at Heathrow where they met an inbound flight
from South Africa after reports of a passenger causing a
disturbance.
"It appears he attempted to enter the cockpit while
the aircraft was in flight."