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Why are victims of 1990 Kuwait hostage crisis suing British Airways?

On Aug. 2, 1990, upon landing for a planned refueling in Kuwait, the crew and passengers of BA149 were taken hostage by Iraqi forces to be used as human shields against the Western military response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait.
The Royal Courts of Justice in London, England.

Passengers and crew held hostage by Iraqi armed forces in 1990 after a British Airways flight landed in Kuwait are suing the airline and the UK government for “deliberately endangering them.”

British law firm McCue Jury & Partners, representing the 91 plaintiffs who filed a civil suit at the High Court in London, announced the legal action Monday.

On Aug. 1, 1990, Flight BA149 departed from London Heathrow for Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, carrying 367 passengers and 18 crew members. It made a refueling stop in Kuwait. The claimants who had been aboard the plane allege that the UK government and British Airways knew that Kuwait had been overrun by Iraqi forces after Saddam Hussein's invasion of the country.

McCue Jury & Partners said in a statement that BA149 was used to secretly transport a special ops team made up of former special forces and security services for immediate and covert deployment to the battlefield, despite the risk posed to civilians onboard.

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