Passengers take down austere religious scholar who yelled "Allahu Akbar" and tried to open exit door during flight. Check out the video.
· Sep 8, 2023 · NottheBee.com

This is crazy: A flight from Israel to England had to make an emergency landing in Belgrade, Serbia, on Monday after a man yelling "Allahu Akbar" tried to open the exit door in the middle of the flight.

Turns out, there are still courageous men out there in this world, which was not ideal for our wannabe terrorist.

Yes, the terrorist started screaming to Allah and then, without much hesitation, there came Victor Troboloni.

A crazed man yelling "Allahu Akbar" tried to open a door in the middle of a flight from Israel to England Monday — before a brave passenger stepped up and tackled him.

Victor Troboloni, an Albanian who was on his way to visit his ailing mother in London, grabbed the hulking, unidentified attacker and held him down with other passengers while crew members zip-tied him.

"It was a very scary situation," Troboloni told the Sun, before adding that he was thinking, "I might never see my mother again."

Bro wasn't about to miss that trip to see mom, was he?

What a guy!

It takes some real guts to bolt into action like that, but somebody had to do it.

Here's some video for you to give you a better idea of how this all went down:

Crazy.

You really never know what to expect these days when you're up in the air like that, and I give Victor Troboloni a huge amount of credit for his bravery. All it takes is one guy to lead the attack and more will inevitably follow.

So be like Victor, boys. Be a leader.

Speaking of Victor, here he is explaining the ordeal:

"He tried to open the fire exit, he was sitting at the back and it's easy to open a fire exit, just pull the handle and that's it," Troboloni told the outlet.

"I got the guy down. He was very heavyweight … I headlocked him and the stewardesses tied his hands with plastic cable ties … I had to do it."

Fellow passengers helped Troboloni hold him down until a flight attendant could find cable ties to restrain him until the plane touched down in Eastern Europe.

"I held him for 10 minutes, he got out of breath, he got tired, he was tied up for 45 minutes to 1 hour before we landed in Belgrade," Troboloni reportedly said.

Bravo, Mr. Troboloni. Bravo.


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