Pan Am Flight 841
| Boeing 747-100, similar to the one hijacked | |
| Hijacking | |
|---|---|
| Date | 2 July 1972 | 
| Summary | Hijacking | 
| Site | Tan Son Nhut Air Base | 
| Aircraft | |
| Aircraft type | Boeing 747-121 | 
| Operator | Pan American World Airways | 
| Call sign | CLIPPER 841 | 
| Flight origin | San Francisco International Airport | 
| 1st stopover | Honolulu (Daniel K. Inouye) International Airport | 
| 2nd stopover | Guam (Antonio Won Pat) International Airport | 
| Last stopover | Manila (Ninoy Aquino) International Airport | 
| Destination | Tan Son Nhut Air Base | 
| Occupants | 152 | 
| Passengers | 136 | 
| Crew | 17 | 
| Fatalities | 1 (hijacker) | 
| Survivors | 152 | 
| History of Ho Chi Minh City | 
|---|
| Metro • Names (district names) • Organised crime | 
| Vietnam portal | 
Pan Am Flight 841 was a commercial passenger flight of a Boeing 747 from San Francisco, California to Saigon, South Vietnam which was hijacked over the South China Sea on 2 July 1972, ostensibly as an act of protest concerning United States involvement in the Vietnam War as well as the expulsion from the U.S. of the South Vietnamese hijacker, a recent graduate of a U.S. university. The hijacking ended when the captain and passengers overcame and killed the lone hijacker after the plane landed at Tan Son Nhut Airport in Saigon.