In the immediate aftermath, the Qureshis and other NLF leaders were lauded as national heroes in Pakistan.
Zulfikar Bhutto, the chairman of the
Pakistan Peoples Party, had come to the airport to personally pay tribute to the hijackers. People took out processions in support of the NLF in Pakistan, particularly in
Azad Kashmir and
Punjab. However,
Mujibur Rahman of the
Awami League, which had won the elections in
East Pakistan, raised doubts that Pakistan president
Yahya Khan and Zulfikar Bhutto had colluded to plan the incident, and demanded an official enquiry. Later, the military regime, led by Yahya Khan, disassociated itself from the hijackers. India claimed that Pakistan was behind the hijacking and subsequently banned overflights of Pakistani aircraft over the Indian territory. The ban later had a significant impact on the Pakistani troop movement into East Pakistan from West Pakistan during the
Bangladesh Liberation War.
Amanullah Khan, the leader of the Plebiscite Front, and thirteen of his colleagues were sentenced to 14 years in prison, after being accused of being Indian agents. However, they were released in 1972, after being imprisoned for 15 months in a prison in
Gilgit, as protests broke out in support of them in
Gilgit-Baltistan. Hashim Qureshi, who was released after serving his sentence, and later returned to India, commented that 400 members of the Plebiscite Front were arrested in Pakistan after the hijacking. Later, Amanullah Khan and Abdul Ansari moved to the United Kingdom, where they found active support from the
Mirpuri diaspora. Later, they converted the Plebiscite Front into a new organisation named as the
Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front, which spearheaded the
Kashmir insurgency in the 1980s. Journalist Braj Mohan Sinha, who authored the book
The Samba Spy Case, based on the
Samba spy scandal, claimed that the hijacking was a clearly planned operation by the Indian intelligence to provoke Pakistan. As per him, while the intended objective was to justify restricting Pakistani overflights and limit movements to East Pakistan, the burning of the plane was unplanned and happened due to the involvement of Pakistani politicians. He also claimed that Hashim Qureshi was a
double agent, and while he initially worked for India, he was turned by Pakistan during his visit to the country, but later agreed to work with the Indian authorities after his capture. However, India never responded to the allegations and Hashim Qureshi has maintained that the NLF was behind the planning and execution of the hijack. == In popular media ==