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Bomb Threats Divert Flight

Bomb-sniffing dogs and Danish explosives experts arrived Wednesday in Greenland to inspect a Seattle-bound jetliner diverted to the Arctic island after threatening messages were found at the Seattle airport and a nearby restaurant.

Scandinavian Airlines System Flight 937 from Copenhagen landed safely late Tuesday at the Kangerlussuaq airport on the west coast of Greenland.

None of the 203 people on board had detected anything unusual, local police vice superintendent Erik Terp said, but the plane had been immediately isolated and the airport was closed for all traffic until it could be inspected by the experts.

The 192 passengers and 11 crew members were taken to a nearby hotel to await a decision on whether the plane was safe to fly on to the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport later Wednesday or whether a new plane would be used.

"The captain suddenly said he would stop at the nearest airport because of two bomb threats made in Seattle," passenger Jakob Stoustrup said by telephone.

"People reacted very calmly and there was no panic" said Stoustrup, a 39-year-old Danish university professor. "There was some frustration over the delay, but when the captain elaborated after we landed, all passengers backed him up on his decision."

One written threat was found at a Jack in the Box restaurant near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, and another in an airport restroom, said airport spokesman Bob Parker. He said the matter had been turned over to the FBI.

Seattle FBI spokesman Ray Lauer said he had little information.

Jack in the Box shift manager Shirad Alsamarrai said the threat at the restaurant was written on a wall in the men's room.

One threat read simply "SAS 937 bomb," said Anders Bjorck, an SAS spokesman in Bridgeport, Conn. The other was similar "with some obscene words at the end of it," he said. Both were written in English.

The information was relayed to the pilot, who decided to divert Flight 937, a Boeing 767, Bjorck said.

"When we get notes like that we always take them very seriously," he said. "We don't compromise with that."

Troels Rasmussen, an SAS spokesman in Copenhagen, said the passengers included a mix of Scandinavians, Europeans and Americans.

Greenland, with some 55,000 inhabitants, is a semiautonomous Danish territory.

The Kangerlussuaq airport is located in the city of Soendre Stroemfjord, a former U.S. Army base some 280 miles north of Greenland's capital, Nuuk.

SAS, the joint national carrier for Denmark, Sweden and Norway, treated most of the passengers to a free tour of Greenland's ice cap, which covers 85 percent of the world's largest island.

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