[h=1]Her country is mourning for the victims of missing airline… but that doesn't stop the queen of Malaysia from enjoying a round of golf[/h]
PUBLISHED: 16:36 GMT, 26 March 2014 | UPDATED: 19:29 GMT, 26 March 2014
309
View
comments
As Malaysia mourns the victims of flight MH370 - which included 38 Malaysians - the nation's queen was photographed enjoying a round of golf.
Her Majesty The Raja Agong Tuanku Hajah Haminah, The Queen of Malaysia, laughed heartily at
Glenmarie Golf & Country Club in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday during a pro-am event prior to the EurAsia Cup.
The pictures emerged as search teams from several nations continued to scour the southern Indian Ocean for debris from the ill-fated Malaysia Airlines plane in a bid to bring the relatives of the passengers some closure.
+6
Sheer joy: Her Majesty The Raja Agong Tuanku Hajah Haminah, The Queen of Malaysia, looks happy and carefree as Malaysia endures some of its darkest days
+6
Tragic days: Pictures of the Queen enjoying herself on the golf course came as search teams continued to scour the oceans for MH370's wreckage
New satellite images have revealed 122 objects in the southern Indian Ocean that could be debris from the Malaysian jetliner, missing since March 8 with 239 people on board, Malaysia's acting transport minister said on Wednesday.
[h=4]More...[/h]
The find has dramatically narrowed the search zone, with the debris spotted across an area measuring just 155 square miles (400 square kilometres).
In the past few days the search area has measured around 622,000 square miles - six times the size of the UK. On Wednesday around 31,000 square miles was scoured.
+6
Delight: The Queen of Malaysia and Miguel Angel Jimenez, the Team Europe Captain, on the first tee during the pro-am event
+6
Concentration: The Queen of Malaysia watches her shot on the second hole
+6
Grief stricken: A relative of the Chinese passengers aboard the Malaysia Airlines MH370 flight grieves after being told that the missing plane might have crashed into the southern Indian Ocean
China dispatches more vessels to search for MH370
<center>
</center>
Hishammuddin Hussein told a news conference that the images were captured by France-based Airbus Defence and Space on March 23.
They are the fourth set of satellite images to show potential debris from Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 in a remote part of the Indian Ocean roughly 2,500 km (1,550 miles) south west of Perth.
The objects are believed to be solid and range from one metre to 23 metres (three to 75 feet) long.
It is understood some pieces of debris are 'bright' but authorities have not confirmed whether they are from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
+6
Anguish: Relatives of the passengers have been tortured by a lack of concrete information about the fate of MH370
Flight MH370 vanished from civilian radar screens less than an hour after taking off from Kuala Lumpur bound for Beijing, and investigators believe someone on the flight may have shut off the plane's communications systems.
Partial military radar tracking showed it turning west and recrossing the Malay Peninsula, apparently under the control of a skilled pilot.
Malaysia's air force has released few details of its radar tracking beyond saying the plane was last detected off the northwest coast heading towards India.
But the country's deputy defence minister, Abdul Rahim Bakri, told parliament that no action was taken when the unidentified plane was spotted because it was assumed it had been ordered to turn back, local media said.
'It was detected by our radar, but the turn back was by a non-hostile plane and we thought maybe it was at the directive of the control tower,' he was quoted as saying.
Asked at the news conference whether air force radar operators thought the plane had been told to turn back by air traffic controllers, Hishammuddin, who is also defence minister, said he could not confirm it.
A dozen aircraft from Australia, the United States, New Zealand, China, Japan and South Korea were once more scouring the seas southwest of Perth in the hunt for wreckage on Wednesday, after bad weather the previous day forced the suspension of the search.
But the area is renowned among mariners for high winds and big waves and the good weather is unlikely to last.
‘This is only going to be a narrow window of opportunity by the looks of things, because another weather system is moving in for Thursday, which looks like that will bring an increase in winds again and also lead to a reduction in visibility through the rain associated with the cold front,’ Neil Bennett, a spokesman for Australia's Bureau of Meteorology, told Reuters.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak this week confirmed Flight MH370 had crashed in the southern Indian Ocean.
- Malaysia's queen was pictured playing golf in Kuala Lumpur
- She laughed heartily on the course at Glenmarie Golf & Country Club
- Nation is mourning the loss of MH370, which had 38 Malaysians on board
PUBLISHED: 16:36 GMT, 26 March 2014 | UPDATED: 19:29 GMT, 26 March 2014
309
View
comments
As Malaysia mourns the victims of flight MH370 - which included 38 Malaysians - the nation's queen was photographed enjoying a round of golf.
Her Majesty The Raja Agong Tuanku Hajah Haminah, The Queen of Malaysia, laughed heartily at
Glenmarie Golf & Country Club in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday during a pro-am event prior to the EurAsia Cup.
The pictures emerged as search teams from several nations continued to scour the southern Indian Ocean for debris from the ill-fated Malaysia Airlines plane in a bid to bring the relatives of the passengers some closure.
+6
Sheer joy: Her Majesty The Raja Agong Tuanku Hajah Haminah, The Queen of Malaysia, looks happy and carefree as Malaysia endures some of its darkest days
+6
Tragic days: Pictures of the Queen enjoying herself on the golf course came as search teams continued to scour the oceans for MH370's wreckage
New satellite images have revealed 122 objects in the southern Indian Ocean that could be debris from the Malaysian jetliner, missing since March 8 with 239 people on board, Malaysia's acting transport minister said on Wednesday.
[h=4]More...[/h]
- Have they FINALLY found flight MH370? French satellite spots 122 objects up to 75ft long in Indian Ocean that appear to be debris from doomed airliner
- 'A shot in the dark': How a UK firm and a team of scientists tracked missing flight MH370 - and confirmed the worst fears of the families of all passengers and crew
- 'Last joyride': MH370 pilot upset over wife moving out and in 'no state of mind to be flying' says long-time friend
The find has dramatically narrowed the search zone, with the debris spotted across an area measuring just 155 square miles (400 square kilometres).
In the past few days the search area has measured around 622,000 square miles - six times the size of the UK. On Wednesday around 31,000 square miles was scoured.
+6
Delight: The Queen of Malaysia and Miguel Angel Jimenez, the Team Europe Captain, on the first tee during the pro-am event
+6
Concentration: The Queen of Malaysia watches her shot on the second hole
+6
Grief stricken: A relative of the Chinese passengers aboard the Malaysia Airlines MH370 flight grieves after being told that the missing plane might have crashed into the southern Indian Ocean
China dispatches more vessels to search for MH370
<center>
Hishammuddin Hussein told a news conference that the images were captured by France-based Airbus Defence and Space on March 23.
They are the fourth set of satellite images to show potential debris from Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 in a remote part of the Indian Ocean roughly 2,500 km (1,550 miles) south west of Perth.
The objects are believed to be solid and range from one metre to 23 metres (three to 75 feet) long.
It is understood some pieces of debris are 'bright' but authorities have not confirmed whether they are from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
+6
Anguish: Relatives of the passengers have been tortured by a lack of concrete information about the fate of MH370
Flight MH370 vanished from civilian radar screens less than an hour after taking off from Kuala Lumpur bound for Beijing, and investigators believe someone on the flight may have shut off the plane's communications systems.
Partial military radar tracking showed it turning west and recrossing the Malay Peninsula, apparently under the control of a skilled pilot.
Malaysia's air force has released few details of its radar tracking beyond saying the plane was last detected off the northwest coast heading towards India.
But the country's deputy defence minister, Abdul Rahim Bakri, told parliament that no action was taken when the unidentified plane was spotted because it was assumed it had been ordered to turn back, local media said.
'It was detected by our radar, but the turn back was by a non-hostile plane and we thought maybe it was at the directive of the control tower,' he was quoted as saying.
Asked at the news conference whether air force radar operators thought the plane had been told to turn back by air traffic controllers, Hishammuddin, who is also defence minister, said he could not confirm it.
A dozen aircraft from Australia, the United States, New Zealand, China, Japan and South Korea were once more scouring the seas southwest of Perth in the hunt for wreckage on Wednesday, after bad weather the previous day forced the suspension of the search.
But the area is renowned among mariners for high winds and big waves and the good weather is unlikely to last.
‘This is only going to be a narrow window of opportunity by the looks of things, because another weather system is moving in for Thursday, which looks like that will bring an increase in winds again and also lead to a reduction in visibility through the rain associated with the cold front,’ Neil Bennett, a spokesman for Australia's Bureau of Meteorology, told Reuters.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak this week confirmed Flight MH370 had crashed in the southern Indian Ocean.