Pepper spray 'prankster' may have sparked Germany airport alarm

Pepper spray 'prankster' may have sparked Germany airport alarm

HAMBURG - German emergency services temporarily evacuated Hamburg airport on Sunday (Feb 12) and treated almost 70 people after an irritant gas was released in the building - probably by a "prankster" using pepper spray, firefighters said.

The northern city's airport was closed and 13 flights delayed or diverted after people reported an unusual smell, respiratory ailments, nausea and stinging eyes.

Firefighters later said they had found an empty cartridge that was thought to have contained pepper spray, which is sold in Germany for personal self-defence.

A spokesman of the Hamburg fire department told media that an unknown "prankster" was thought to have released the gas, which then spread via the hall's ventilation system.

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After similar incidents recently at local schools, "it has obviously become fashionable to empty this type of cartridge" in public places, fire department official Norbert Kusch told national news agency DPA.

Authorities said they ruled out an act of terrorism, DPA added.

Sixty-eight people were examined by paramedics and nine of them were taken to hospital.

Hundreds more had to wait outside in freezing winter temperatures for more than an hour, while subway trains to the airport were also halted.

Maik Lewerenz of the federal police office at the airport said "a bad smell has spread in the security area, where passengers and their carry-on luggage are checked.

"A number of people complained about eye and respiratory irritation," he said.

Hamburg airport is Germany's fifth largest, with just over one million passengers a month.

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