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MALAYSIAN Airlines flight en route to China is missing.

sadshishamo

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If the fire was a slow type then the pilots would have had a chance to make a Mayday call. If it was so fast as to cut off all forms of communications then it would have also reached the two ( crew and passenger ) oxygen systems very quickly and the plane would have become an instant fireball ie no drifting for a long distance over the ocean.


It is very sad that up to this day, conspiracy theories abound. And each conspiracy theory seems more out of the world than the last. From killing of Navy SEALs assigned to protect sensitive cargo, to abduction of an entire plane carrying some high tech military equipment, the stories get more ridiculous and full of holes.

The simplest explanation is the best explanation. We appeal to Occam's Razor.

This is my take on what happened. Like MI 185 SilkAir, MH370 had an electrical fire mid-route. As the fire spread, it cut off communications, transponders, signalling equipment, and other circuitry one by one.

The pilot turned around and tried to head for the closest airport or airbase to land. Unfortunately, the crew was asphyxiated by the fumes and they lost consciousness. The plane drifted for a long distance until finally it simply broke apart and crashed into the South Indian Ocean. The heavy wreckage sunk quickly.

Occam's Razor, please. The simplest explanation is the best one, and also the most likely one. Don't bring in Navy SEALs or Afghnistan or other fuck nonsense.
 
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Sinkie

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If the fire was a slow type then the pilots would have had a chance to make a Mayday call. If it was so fast as to cut off all communications then it would have also reached two ( crew and passenger ) oxygen systems and the plane would have become a fireball ie no drifting for a long distance over the ocean.

The plane, if we believe the Inmarsat pings, made a left turn when it was at Andaman sea and it did not drift over the ocean. It turned deliberately. If it had drifted, it would have went westerly and reach Maldives and then sunk near and off the coast of Somalia, when it ran out of fuel.
 

virus

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I believe in the pilot..... I do.



His ability to manufacture the biggest scam of this century. And when no one will suspect, Cappy Zaharie Jack Shahrow will pull the cursed plane from the depths of Indiana Jones Ocean and return to the shores of bolehland to fight against blackbeard sitting atop putrajaya.

And then the new reign will begin. Johnny Depp will b so happy.
 

sadshishamo

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So many possibilities , but I was merely offering a counterpoint in response to TFBH's post.


The plane, if we believe the Inmarsat pings, made a left turn when it was at Andaman sea and it did not drift over the ocean. It turned deliberately. If it had drifted, it would have went westerly and reach Maldives and then sunk near and off the coast of Somalia, when it ran out of fuel.
 

virus

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The plane, if we believe the Inmarsat pings, made a left turn when it was at Andaman sea and it did not drift over the ocean. It turned deliberately. If it had drifted, it would have went westerly and reach Maldives and then sunk near and off the coast of Somalia, when it ran out of fuel.

tat's where it got the crocodile slap by bomoh king.. the pings were from the coconuts.
 

Sinkie

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There is no way the plane could have flown from the Andaman sea, heading south to the southern indian ocean without
the multiple radar at Diego Garcia and the US satellites above the indian ocean not picking up the flight path. Military radar does not need transponder signals to detect any unknown object in the sky.

There is no need for Inmarsat satellite to receive any ping, because it is a big fat lie. Inmarsat refused to release its raw ping data for internet researchers to analyse the data, because it knows the data is fabricated. Inmarsat is owned by UK, a proxy for USA in anything covert or military......hand in glove.
 

KNNBNBCB

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Unconfirmed reports say MH370 black box found



PERTH - There are unconfirmed reports that the black box flight recorder from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 has been found. Perth radio station 6PR tweeted the report, citing aviation expert Geoffrey Thomas, according to the Herald Sun. Australia's Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who is in China, will give a press conference soon and will address the latest MH370 developments, Mr Thomas indicated. Mr Thomas is the editor-n-chief of the website airlineratings.com and executive editor of AirlineReview.com. According to Mr Thomas, the Ocean Shield and the HMS Echo have both left the search area "at speed" and sources had told his there was a possibility they had "triangulated" and located the black box. He stressed these were unconfirmed reports. - See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/as...black-box-found-20140411#sthash.cfTCMD66.dpuf

http://www.straitstimes.com/news/as...ed-reports-say-mh370-black-box-found-20140411
 

scoobydoo

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The plane, if we believe the Inmarsat pings, made a left turn when it was at Andaman sea and it did not drift over the ocean. It turned deliberately. If it had drifted, it would have went westerly and reach Maldives and then sunk near and off the coast of Somalia, when it ran out of fuel.

hmmm....Somalia, Black Hawk Down.

if MH370 really went down there, movie will be called ..........?
 

Sinkie

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hmmm....Somalia, Black Hawk Down.

if MH370 really went down there, movie will be called ..........?

No, it did not lah. It was at Diego Garcia, being remote controlled there by AWAC plane. That's why USA was totally
silent. It's silence is deafening.
 

virus

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There is no way the plane could have flown from the Andaman sea, heading south to the southern indian ocean without
the multiple radar at Diego Garcia and the US satellites above the indian ocean not picking up the flight path. Military radar does not need transponder signals to detect any unknown object in the sky.

There is no need for Inmarsat satellite to receive any ping, because it is a big fat lie. Inmarsat refused to release its raw ping data for internet researchers to analyse the data, because it knows the data is fabricated. Inmarsat is owned by UK, a proxy for USA in anything covert or military......hand in glove.

well the bomoh king also refusd to release his flight data how he managed to find out where the plane was down too. n his magic red carpet was made by alibaba.com owned by china.
 

steffychun

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There is no way the plane could have flown from the Andaman sea, heading south to the southern indian ocean without
the multiple radar at Diego Garcia and the US satellites above the indian ocean not picking up the flight path. Military radar does not need transponder signals to detect any unknown object in the sky.

There is no need for Inmarsat satellite to receive any ping, because it is a big fat lie. Inmarsat refused to release its raw ping data for internet researchers to analyse the data, because it knows the data is fabricated. Inmarsat is owned by UK, a proxy for USA in anything covert or military......hand in glove.

There's no way it could have passed RSAF radar extreme range. Or Indonesia letting it through its airspace: Indons are exact pure friends of the m&ds.
 

PrivateEyes

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Exclusive: Malaysia starts investigating confused initial response to missing jet

By Siva Govindasamy and Niluksi Koswanage
KUALA LUMPUR Fri Apr 11, 2014 10:42am EDT

<iframe src="//www.youtube.com/embed/cAd_OPUGnJ8?rel=0" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" width="560"></iframe>

Australian PM says searchers confident of position of MH370's black boxes

(Reuters) - Malaysia's government has begun investigating civil aviation and military authorities to determine why opportunities to identify and track Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 were missed in the chaotic hours after it vanished, two officials said.

The preliminary internal enquiries come as tensions mount between civilian and military authorities over who bears most responsibility for the initial confusion and any mistakes that led to a week-long search in the wrong ocean.

"What happened at that time is being investigated and I can't say any more than that because it involves the military and the government," a senior government official told Reuters.

In an interview with Reuters last weekend, Malaysia Airlines Chief Executive Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said internal enquiries were under way, although he declined to give details.

A government spokesman did not respond to Reuters questions over whether an investigation had been launched. The senior government source said it was aimed at getting a detailed picture of the initial response. It was unclear which government department was in charge or whether a formal probe had been opened.

Malaysia's opposition coalition has demanded a parliamentary inquiry into what happened on the ground in those first few hours. Government officials have said any formal inquiry should not begin until the flight's black box recorders are found.

The Boeing 777 was carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew when it disappeared on March 8. Malaysia says it believes the plane crashed into the southern Indian Ocean after being deliberately diverted from its Kuala Lumpur-to-Beijing route.

A search effort is taking place well out to sea off the Australian city of Perth to try to locate any wreckage as well as the recorders which may provide answers to what happened onboard.

MECHANICAL PROBLEM ASSUMED

Interviews with the senior government source and four other civilian and military officials show that air traffic controllers and military officials assumed the plane had turned back to an airport in Malaysia because of mechanical trouble when it disappeared off civilian radar screens at 1:21 a.m. local time.

That assumption took hold despite no distress call or other communication coming from the cockpit, which could have been a clue that the plane had been hijacked or deliberately diverted.

The five sources together gave Reuters the most detailed account yet of events in the hour after the plane vanished. All declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the issue and because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

"The initial assumption was that the aircraft could have diverted due to mechanical issues or, in the worst case scenario, crashed," said a senior Malaysian civilian source. "That is what we were working on."

Officials at Malaysia's Department of Civil Aviation, which oversees air traffic controllers, the Defence Ministry and the air force directed requests for comment to the prime minister's office, which did not respond.

One senior military official said air traffic control had informed the military at around 2:00 a.m. that a plane was missing. The standard operating procedure was to do so within 15 minutes, he said. Another military source said the notification was slow in coming, but did not give a time.

Civil aviation officials told Reuters their response was in line with guidelines, but they did not give a specific time for when the military was informed.

Once alerted, military radar picked up an unidentified plane heading west across peninsular Malaysia, the senior military official said. The air force has said a plane that could have been MH370 was last plotted on military radar at 2:15 a.m., 320 km (200 miles) northwest of the west coast state of Penang.

PLANE TRACKED IN REAL TIME?

Top military officials have publicly said Malaysia's U.S. and Russian-made fighter jets stationed at air force bases in Penang and the east coast state of Kuantan were not scrambled to intercept the plane because it was not viewed as "hostile".

"When we were alerted, we got our boys to check the military radar. We noticed that there was an unmarked plane flying back but (we) could not confirm (its identity)," said the senior military source. "Based on the information we had from ATC (Air Traffic Control) and DCA (Department of Civil Aviation), we did not send up any jets because it was possibly mechanical problems and the plane might have been going back to Penang."

The military has not publicly acknowledged it tracked the plane in real time as it crossed back over the peninsula.

While fighter jets would not have had enough fuel to track a Boeing 777 for long and darkness would have complicated the operation, they could have spotted MH370 flying across peninsular Malaysia and possibly beyond, aviation experts said.

That could have enabled Malaysia to get a better fix on where it was headed and thus possibly ruled out the need to search off its east coast in the Gulf of Thailand and the South China Sea, around where MH370 was last seen on civilian radar.

Fighter pilots should be able to scramble within minutes, aviation experts said, although the time can vary widely from country to country. In Europe and North America, radar experts said controllers were trained to coordinate across civil and military lines and across borders.

They said military jets would have been scrambled, as they were from a Greek air force base in 2005 when a Helios Airways jet with 121 people on board lost contact over the Aegean Sea after suffering a decompression that knocked out the pilots. Two F-16 jets could see the captain's seat empty and the first officer slumped over the controls. The plane crashed in Greece after running out of fuel.

"This raises questions of coordination between military and civil controllers," former pilot Hugh Dibley, a fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society in London, said of Malaysia's response.

BUREAUCRATIC DELAYS

Another contentious issue has been whether the military was slow in passing on its radar data that showed an unidentified plane had re-crossed the Malay peninsula.

Two civilian aviation officials said military bureaucracy delayed the sharing of this information, although they gave no precise timeframe for when it was handed over.

"The armed forces knew much earlier that the aircraft could have turned back. That is why the search was expanded to include the Strait of Malacca within a day or two," said a second senior civilian source, who was familiar with the initial search, referring to the narrow stretch of water between Indonesia and Malaysia, on the western side of the peninsula.

"But the military did not confirm this until much later due to resistance from senior officers, and the government needed to step in. We wasted our time in the South China Sea."

Government sources have said Prime Minister Najib Razak had to force the military to turn over its raw radar data to investigators during the first week after the flight's disappearance.

Military officials have said they did not want to risk causing confusion by sharing the data before it had been verified, adding this was why Air Force chief Rodzali Daud went to the air base in Penang on March 9, where the plane's final radar plot was recorded.

On the same day, Rodzali said the search was being expanded to the west coast, although Reuters has not been able to determine if that meant the data was being shared with other Malaysian officials.

On March 12, four days after Flight MH370 disappeared, Rodzali told reporters there was still no confirmation the unidentified plane had been Flight MH370, but added Malaysia was sharing the radar data with international civilian and military authorities, including those from the United States.

Authorities called off the search in the South China Sea on March 15 after Razak said satellite data showed the plane could have taken a course anywhere from central Asia to the southern Indian Ocean.

FEARS OF LOSING JOBS

A sixth source, a senior official in the civil aviation sector, said the plane's disappearance had exposed bureaucratic dysfunction in Malaysia, which has rarely been subject to such international demands for transparency. "There was never the need for these silos to speak to one another. It's not because of ill intent, it's just the way the system was set up," the official said.

The accounts given to Reuters reveal growing tensions between civilian officials, the military and Malaysia Airlines over whether more could have been done in those initial hours.

One of the Reuters sources said military officials in particular were concerned they could lose their jobs.

Tensions have also emerged between the government and state-controlled Malaysia Airlines.

Malaysia's defence minister and acting transport minister, Hishammuddin Hussein, said in an interview with China's CCTV that the airline would have to "answer" for its mistakes in dealing with the relatives of the some 150 Chinese passengers on board.

In his interview with Reuters, Malaysia Airlines chief Ahmad Jauhari played down talk of tension, saying there were "slight differences of opinion."

(Additional reporting by Tim Hepher in PARIS; Writing by Stuart Grudgings; Editing by Alex Richardson and Dean Yates)

 

PrivateEyes

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Australian PM's confidence over black box signals from MH370 rejected by search chief

Australian PM’s ‘confidence’ over black box signal goes against latest statement from search chief


PUBLISHED : Thursday, 10 April, 2014, 6:05pm
UPDATED : Saturday, 12 April, 2014, 3:11am

Danny Lee and Angela Meng

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott expressed optimism over the hunt for missing flight MH370 during an official visit to China yesterday - despite the search chief's insistence there had been no new breakthrough.

Abbott said after attending a luncheon in Shanghai: "We have very much narrowed down the search area and we are very confident that the signals we are detecting are from the black box on MH370."

He said the hunt was focused on a narrow zone in the southern Indian Ocean and officials "knew the position of the black box flight recorder to within some kilometres", Xinhua reported.

Abbott, who later met President Xi Jinping in Beijing, warned that recovering the flight data and cockpit voice recorders would still be a "long, slow and painstaking process".

53917beaeedb739670ad4da2a143d6c6_0.jpg


Tony Abbott meets Xi Jinping in Beijing yesterday. Photo: Reuters

Abbott's optimism was in contrast to comments from the head of the agency co-ordinating the search effort, retired air chief marshal Angus Houston.

He said the fifth and latest "ping" signal, detected on Thursday, was not related to MH370.

And Houston cautioned that the Joint Agency Co-ordination Centre would not be rushed into deploying underwater vessels to search for the recorders.

He said yesterday in a statement that appeared to contradict Abbott's assertions: "A decision as to when to deploy the autonomous underwater vehicle will be made on advice from experts … and could be some days away.

"There has been no major breakthrough in the search."

The recorders may help investigators solve the biggest mystery in modern aviation history.

The Malaysia Airlines plane was carrying 239 people - 154 of them Chinese - when it vanished on March 8 on its way from Beijing to Kuala Lumpur.

The flight changed course and headed in the opposite direction.

tpbje20140409217.jpg


Angus Houston, head of the Joint Agency Co-ordination Centre (JACC) supervising the search, says the ping is "unlikely" to be from the black box. Photo: Xinhua

Investigators believe it was diverted deliberately, either for an emergency or other reasons.

The hunt has brought together more than 25 countries, but only a few of them are equipped with the deep-water technology needed to retrieve the recorders. Pings detected in the search are believed to have come from a depth of 4,500 metres.

The black boxes from Air France flight 447, which crashed into the mid-Atlantic in 2009, were retrieved at 4,000 metres.

Stefan Williams, a professor of marine robotics at Sydney University, said the Australia-led search team lacked the necessary equipment.

But he added: "There are remotely controlled vehicles available which are capable of operating at those depths. Deep water equipment is designed to go down to 6,000 metres. The US in particular has a number of systems used previously in the search for the Air France flight."

After Malaysia announced the delay of a diplomatic trip to China next week, Beijing postponed the delivery of two goodwill pandas scheduled to arrive in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday until an "appropriate time".

Additional reporting by Associated Press

 

PrivateEyes

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Scammers target MH370 families

Yahoo!7 and wires April 12, 2014, 4:35 pm<object id="flashObj" classid="clsid:biggrin:

<embed src="http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9?isVid=1&isUI=1" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" flashvars="videoId=3457962438001&linkBaseURL=http%3A%2F%2Fau.news.yahoo.com%2Fa%2F22588341%2Fscammers-target-mh370-families%2F&playerID=2513628634001&playerKey=AQ~~,AAACKW9LH8k~,A7HfECo5t7DrAeaToOVr5sEdpPjJEcCi&domain=embed&dynamicStreaming=true" base="http://admin.brightcove.com" name="flashObj" seamlesstabbing="false" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" swliveconnect="true" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/shockwave/download/index.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash" height="270" width="480"></object>

scammers_target_mh370_families375_19khnm5-19khnm9.jpg


Scammers are targeting relatives of those aboard missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370.

A bogus email has been sent to the families of missing passengers suggesting compensation claims are possible even though the aircraft hasn't yet been found.

"At a minimum, an international aviation treaty allows the next-of-kin of the plane's MH370 passengers to seek up to US$175,000 equivalent in your local currency," it says.

This purports to come from Allen Helter of Malaysia Airlines and urges those claiming to contact Mohamed Bin Abd Wahab of the Eon Bank in Kuala Lumpur.

However, the email originates from an account in Hong Kong.

It appears to be a standard advance fee fraud, with those seeking compensation first required to pay administrative charges before funds can be released.

mh370_family_member638.jpg


A woman, one of the relatives of Chinese passengers aboard the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 shows her mobile phone displaying a photo of her father, who was aboard the missing plane near the wall displaying messages of wishes for the passengers at a hotel in Beijing, China. Photo: AP

Focus turns on Malaysian authorities

Malaysia's government has begun investigating civil aviation and military authorities to determine why opportunities to identify and track Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 were missed in the chaotic hours after it vanished, two officials said.

The preliminary internal enquiries come as tensions mount between civilian and military authorities over who bears most responsibility for the initial confusion and any mistakes that led to a week-long search in the wrong ocean.

"What happened at that time is being investigated and I can't say any more than that because it involves the military and the government," a senior government official told Reuters.

In an interview with Reuters last weekend, Malaysia Airlines Chief Executive Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said internal enquiries were under way, although he declined to give details.

A government spokesman did not respond to Reuters questions over whether an investigation had been launched. The senior government source said it was aimed at getting a detailed picture of the initial response. It was unclear which government department was in charge or whether a formal probe had been opened.

Malaysia's opposition coalition has demanded a parliamentary inquiry into what happened on the ground in those first few hours. Government officials have said any formal inquiry should not begin until the flight's black box recorders are found.

mh370_search_map638.jpg


In this map provided on Friday, April 11, 2014, by the Joint Agency Coordination Centre, details are presented on the search for the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in the southern Indian Ocean off the Australian west coast.. Photo: AP

The Boeing 777 was carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew when it disappeared on March 8. Malaysia says it believes the plane crashed into the southern Indian Ocean after being deliberately diverted from its Kuala Lumpur-to-Beijing route.

A search effort is taking place well out to sea off the Australian city of Perth to try to locate any wreckage as well as the recorders which may provide answers to what happened onboard.

Authorities had narrowed down the search area for the plane to a 10-square kilometre radius as the hunt for the black box narrowed.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has briefed Chinese President Xi Jinping about the search for MH370, warning him there could be a long and painstaking road ahead.

malaysia_airlines_search_perth638.jpg


Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) co-pilot squadron leader Brett McKenzie, left, and Flight Engineer Trent Wyatt sit in the cockpit aboard a P-3 Orion on route to search over the southern Indian Ocean looking for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. Photo: AP

Mr Abbott updated President Xi on the Australian-led search effort for the Malaysia Airlines plane in the Indian Ocean during a bilateral meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

The prime minister said Australian authorities had very much narrowed down the search area to some kilometres after receiving "strong detections" from what they're confident is the plane's black box.

But he didn't mince words, warning his Chinese counterpart there was still a long way to go.
"This will be a very long, slow and painstaking process," he said.

News limited websites have reported Mr Abbott told the Chinese President that the Australian ship Ocean Shield had narrowed down the search area in the Indian Ocean where pings from the flight recorders were detected to a grid of around 10km by 10km.

Mr Abbott's comments came after a day of somewhat mixed messages from authorities leading the search for MH370, which has been missing for five weeks, since March 8.

The prime minister told business leaders in Shanghai on Friday that the search in the Indian Ocean was narrowing.

"We are confident that we know the position of the black box flight recorder to within some kilometres," Mr Abbott said.

A short time later Australian search coordinator, retired Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, indicated there was little change in the search area.

"On the information I have available to me, there has been no major breakthrough in the search for MH370," Mr Houston said.

He said signals apparently detected by an Australian search aircraft on Thursday were ruled not to have come from a black box flight recorder.

The Joint Agency Coordination Centre issued a statement on Friday saying the search area still totalled 46,713 square kilometres - vastly different from Mr Abbott's statement.

Still, there remains strong hope that the flight's all-important black box recorder could be found.

Its batteries are expected to expire soon, so time remains critical.

The Australian vessel Ocean Shield has to date recorded four signals that are believed to have come from at least a black box recorder.

The Ocean Shield on Friday was in an area about 2200km northwest of Perth continuing sweeps of its pinger locator to detect further signals.

Orion aircraft were also continuing the search.


 

virus

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http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/mh370-hijacked-afghanistan-russian-intelligence-3407468



Apr 13, 2014 02:01
By Chris Richards

Unknown terrorists are said to have taken control of the missing plane and forced it to land near Kandahar

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A Russian newspaper has claimed that Flight MH370 was hijacked by "unknown terrorists" and flown to Afghanistan, where the crew and passengers are now being held hostage.

The extraordinary comments, attributed to a Russian intelligence source, appeared in the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper.

The source told the paper: "Flight MH370 malaysia Airlines missing on March 8 with 239 passengers was hijacked.

"Pilots are not guilty; the plane was hijacked by unknown terrorists.

"We know that the name of the terrorist who gave instructions to pilots is "Hitch."

"The plane is in Afghanistan not far from Kandahar near the border with Pakistan."

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-...an-russian-intelligence-3407468#ixzz2ylrpUIZm
Follow us: @DailyMirror on Twitter | DailyMirror on Facebook
 

PrivateEyes

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MH370 co-pilot tried phone call mid-flight, report says

Plane flew low enough over Penang for signal to be picked up, Malaysian newspaper says

PUBLISHED : Sunday, 13 April, 2014, 5:41am
UPDATED : Sunday, 13 April, 2014, 7:36am

Agence France-Presse in Kuala Lumpur

china_australia_xaw105_42289487.jpg


Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott appeared to step back from his comments on Friday when he voiced great confidence that signals from the "black box" had been detected. Photo: AP

The co-pilot of missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 attempted to make a mid-flight call from his mobile phone just before the plane vanished from radar screens, a Malaysian newspaper reported yesterday, citing unnamed investigators.

The call ended abruptly possibly "because the aircraft was fast moving away from the [telecommunications] tower", the New Straits Times quoted a source as saying.

But the report also quoted another source saying that while Fariq Abdul Hamid's "line was reattached", there was no certainty that a call was made.

The report - titled a "Desperate call for help" - did not say whom he was trying to contact.

Meanwhile the search for the plane continued in the southern Indian Ocean as Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott appeared to step back from his comments on Friday when he voiced great confidence that signals from the "black box" had been detected.

Abbott repeated his confidence in the search, but stressed the difficulties remaining.

"We do have a high degree of confidence the transmissions we have been picking up are from flight MH370," Abbott said in Beijing on the last day of a visit to China. But he added: "No one should underestimate the difficulties of the task ahead of us.

"Yes, we have very considerably narrowed down the search area but trying to locate anything 4.5 kilometres beneath the surface of the ocean about a thousand kilometres from land is a massive, massive task and it is likely to continue for a long time to come."

The search area now covers 41,393 square kilometres and the core of the search zone lies 2,330 kilometres northwest of Perth.

The Malaysia Airlines flight disappeared soon after taking off on March 8 from Kuala Lumpur bound for Beijing with 227 passengers and 12 crew on board.

Fariq and Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah came under intense scrutiny after the plane vanished.

The NST report said flight 370 flew low enough near Penang island on Malaysia's west coast for a telecommunications tower to pick up the co-pilot's phone signal. The phone line was "reattached" between the time the plane veered off course and blipped off the radar.

Malaysia's Transport Ministry said it was examining the report.

 

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Malaysia rejects reports of phone calls from missing jet

AFP-Xinhua | 2014-4-14 1:03:01

Malaysia on Sunday rejected claims that phone calls were made from Flight MH370 before it vanished, but refused to rule out any possibility in a so far fruitless investigation into the jet's disappearance.

Malaysia's New Straits Times, quoting an anonymous source, reported Saturday that co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid made a call which ended abruptly, possibly "because the aircraft was fast moving away from the (telecommunications) tower."

There had also been unconfirmed reports of calls by the Malaysia Airlines plane's captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah before or during the flight.

Malaysian Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein told reporters Sunday that authorities had no knowledge of any calls from the jet's cockpit.

"As far as I know, no," he said when asked if any calls had been made.

However, he added that he did not want to speculate on "the realm of the police and other international agencies" investigating the case.

"I do not want to disrupt the investigations that are being done now not only by the Malaysian police but the FBI, MI6, Chinese intelligence and other intelligence agencies," he said.

The police chief also clarified last week that passengers had not categorically been cleared since the investigation was ongoing.

Several theories have been put forward during the investigation including hijacking, a terrorist plot or a pilot gone rogue. But authorities are clutching at straws as to the fate of the plane without crucial data from the jet's "black box" flight recorder, which has yet to be located, and without any wreckage.

Several sonic "pings" which authorities have said are consistent with a black box have been detected in the search area in South Indian Ocean.

But Australia's Joint Agency Coordination Centre said Sunday that another 24 hours had passed without a confirmed signal, increasing fears that batteries in the beacons attached to the plane's two black boxes may now have run flat.

There were 12 aircraft and 14 ships combing a 57,506 square kilometer area on Sunday.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott told Chinese media the search was narrowing, with "a high level of confidence" that the black box will be located.

 

Sinkie

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Yeah right, only the co-pilot made phone call in mid-flight...........the rest of the 238 didn't.

Making phone call in flight is the same disinfo as what is dished out for 9/11 flight 93. What a load of baloney.
 
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