Friday, February 27, 2015

From the credible to the crackpot, experts examine those MH370 conspiracy theories

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hijacking, Chinese espionage, exploding batteries, and of course alien abduction: From the credible to the crackpot, experts examine those MH370 conspiracy theories as tragic anniversary approaches with no sign of the mystery being solved

  • Searchers have found no sign of MH370, which went missing on March 8
  • Airliner flew from Kuala Lumpur and should have arrived in Beijing, China
  • Disappearance of plane has prompted conspiracy theorists to speculate
  • Some think pilot hijacked the Malaysian airliner amid personal problems
  • Another theory is that Russia stole plane on the orders of Vladimir Putin
  • It is also claimed that the plane and passengers were abducted... by aliens

Few mysteries have inspired such heated debate as the disappearance of Malaysian airliner MH370, its 12 crew and 227 passengers.

Searchers scouring huge swathes of the world's oceans for the jet have so far found no sign of it and theories of what happened, from the credible to the downright crackpot, have continued to abound.

Here aviation and security experts examine the plethora of theories that have sprung up in the eleven months since the jet disappeared from radar on March 8, 2014 after apparently changing course three times.

Anthony Glees, an author and the director of the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, and former British Airways pilot Alastair Rosenschein have given their opinion on each of the theories, based on their expert knowledge.

Did the pilot hijack his own plane?

Pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah planned mass murder because of personal problems, locking his co-pilot out of the cockpit, closing down all communications, depressurising the main cabin and then disabling the aircraft so that it continued flying on auto-pilot until it ran out of fuel.

That was the popular theory in the weeks after the plane's disappearance.

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Pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah's wife (pictured with her husband and children) angrily denied any personal problems

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Theory: Some believe Pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah (left in left picture and right) planned mass murder because of personal problems

His personal problems, rumours in Kuala Lumpur said, included a split with his wife Fizah Khan, and his fury that a relative, opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, had been given a five-year jail sentence for sodomy shortly before he boarded the plane for the flight to Beijing.

But the pilot's wife angrily denied any personal problems and other family members and his friends said he was a devoted family man and loved his job.

This theory is also the conclusion of the first independent study into the disaster by the New Zealand-based air accident investigator, Ewan Wilson.

Wilson, the founder of Kiwi Airlines and a commercial pilot himself, arrived at the shocking conclusion after considering 'every conceivable alternative scenario'.

However, he has not been able to provide any conclusive evidence to support his theory.

The claims are made in the book 'Goodnight Malaysian 370', which Wilson co-wrote with the New Zealand broadsheet journalist, Geoff Taylor.

It's also been rumoured that Zaharie used a flight simulator at his home to plot a path to a remote island.

However, officials in Kuala Lumpur declared that Malysian police and the FBI's technical experts had found nothing to suggest he was planning to hijack the flight after closely examining his flight simulator.

Professor Glees said: 'Had a pilot wished to kill himself and his passengers, he had no need to do it in such a bizarre way, indeed he could have crashed the plane the moment the transponder was turned off. Without a shred of supporting evidence, this theory simply doesn't stack up.

‘What's more, I was told by someone senior who knew both the airline and the pilot that the chief pilot was one of their best and would not have been allowed to fly if there had been any sign of health or mental issues.’

Mr Rosenschein said: 'This is a possibility. It is both plausible and fits all the known facts about the disappearance.

'But, it is not possible to claim the transponder was turned off as the Malaysian Transport Minister stated. All that could be said is that the signal ceased to be received from the transponder.

'This may seem like a subtle distance, however the Malaysian authorities by stating incorrectly that the transponder was turned off led everyone to believe this was a hijacking or a suicide for which there is not a shred of evidence.'

The co-pilot was the real hijacker

Co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27, again for personal problems, was suspected by rumour-spreaders to have overpowered the pilot and disabled the aircraft, flying it to its doom with crew and passengers unable to get through the locked cockpit door.

Theorists have put forward the suggestion that he was having relationship problems and this was his dramatic way of committing suicide.

But he was engaged to be married to Captain Nadira Ramli, 26, a fellow pilot from another airline, and loved his job. There are no known reasons for him to have taken any fatal action. 

Others have suggested that because he was known to have occasionally invited young women into the cockpit during a flight, he had done so this time and something had gone wrong.

Young Jonti Roos said in March that she spent an entire flight in 2011 in the cockpit being entertained by Hamid, who was smoking.

Interest in the co-pilot was renewed when it was revealed he was the last person to communicate from the cockpit after the communication system was cut off. 

Professor Glees said: 'If you invite women into your cockpit, you are breaking bad but also proving you love life and the glamour of being a pilot at 35 thousand feet. You're not suicidal and you're not murderous.

'However, it is possible that those 'pretty girls' invited into the cockpit were Uighur separatists - the indigenous ethnic minority in China's Xinjiang region which are increasingly portrayed as auxiliaries of al-Qaeda - this is a theory I do quite like.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'This too is possible although the cockpit door can be opened with determined effort from the cabin.'

Russians secretly landed MH370 at a space port in Kazakhstan

An expert has claimed the missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370 was hijacked on the orders of Vladimir Putin and secretly landed in Kazakhstan.

New theory: An aviation expert believes that Russia hijacked MH370 as part of a secret mission, and landed it at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan

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New theory: An aviation expert believes that Russia hijacked MH370 as part of a secret mission, and landed it at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan

Scene: This crumbling airport was built for planes to self-land at Baikonur, meaning if MH370 was hijacked, the people responsible would not have to be pilots in order to set the plane down

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Scene: This crumbling airport was built for planes to self-land at Baikonur, meaning if MH370 was hijacked, the people responsible would not have to be pilots in order to set the plane down

Expert: Jeff Wise is a science writer, author and member of aviation experts the Independent Group

Jeff Wise, a U.S. science writer who spearheaded CNN's coverage of the Boeing 777-200E, has based his outlandish theory on pings that the plane gave off for seven hours after it went missing, that were recorded by British telecommunications company Inmarsat.

Wise believes that hijackers 'spoofed' the plane's navigation data to make it seem like it went in another direction, but flew it to the Baikonur Cosmodrome, which is leased from Kazakhstan by Russia.

However, Wise admits in New York Magazine that he does not know why Vladimir Putin would want to steal a plane full of people and that his idea is somewhat 'crazy'.

Wise also noted there were three Russian men onboard the flight, two of them Ukrainian passport holders. 

Aviation disaster experts analysed satellite data and discovered - like the data recorded by Inmarsat - that the plane flew on for hours after losing contact.

Careful examination of the evidence has revealed that MH370 made three turns after the last radio call, first a turn to the left, then two more, taking the plane west, then south towards Antarctica.

Professor Glees said: 'What on earth would be the benefit to Putin of such a hijacking? Russia is a leaky country, and if this had happened, we'd certainly know by now.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Extremely unlikely. The aircraft would have been tracked on primary radar throughout the flight, quite apart from the implausible political scenario involving the Russian President.'

MH370 was used by terrorists for suicide attack on Chinese flotilla

This extraordinary claim came from 41-year-old British yachtsman Katherine Tee, from Liverpool, whose initial account of seeing what she thought was a burning plane in the night sky made headlines around the world.

On arrival in Thailand's Phuket after sailing across the Indian Ocean from Cochin, southern India with her husband, she said: 'I could see the outline of the plane - it looked longer than planes usually do.There was what appeared to be black smoke streaming from behind.'

British yachtsman Katherine Tee (pictured with her husband) said she believed MH370 was a kamikaze plane that was aimed at a flotilla of Chinese ships

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British yachtsman Katherine Tee (pictured with her husband) said she believed MH370 was a kamikaze plane that was aimed at a flotilla of Chinese ships

Ms Tee's general description of the time and place was vague and she lost all credibility when she later stated on her blog that she believed MH370 was a kamikaze plane that was aimed at a flotilla of Chinese ships and it was shot down before it could smash into the vessels.

Without solid proof of the satellite data, she wrote on her blog, Saucy Sailoress, the plane she saw was flying at low altitude towards the military convoy she and her husband had seen on recent nights. She added that internet research showed a Chinese flotilla was in the area at the time.

Professor Glees said: 'Eye-witnesses are notoriously unreliable and if Ms Tee has the answer - the wreckage would have been found by now at sea.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Extremely unlikely and demonstrative of geopolitical naivety by Katherine Tee.'

IS THE SEARCH HAPPENING THOUSANDS OF MILES OFF COURSE?

The current search for the airliner, which took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport at 12.41am for an approximate six-hour flight to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew, is taking place some 1,800 miles (3,000km) from Perth, Western Australia.

The search location, using ships and underwater vessels, is based on a series of pings believed to be from the aircraft that the British satellite company, Inmarsat, has used in its calculations.

The aircraft, data appears to show, made a u-turn and headed back towards the Malaysian peninsula.

Martin Dolan, Australian Transport Safety Bureau Commissioner, has said that he had hopes his team of searchers will find the wreckage by the end of May.

He told News Corp: 'I don't wake up every day thinking "This will be the day", but I do wake up every day hoping this will be it, and expecting that sometime between now and May that will be the day.'

Mr McKay said he has spent many months pondering what he had seen - and remains unmoved in his opinion that if he had observed a burning plane it must have gone down in the South China Sea

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Mr McKay said he has spent many months pondering what he had seen - and remains unmoved in his opinion that if he had observed a burning plane it must have gone down in the South China Sea

Against the theories that the aircraft is lying under the sea somewhere in the southern Indian Ocean, based on satellite calculations, are claims that those readings are wrong.

As MailOnline revealed exclusively last week, New Zealand oil rig worker Mike McKay reported seeing a 'burning object' as he looked up at the night sky.

He doesn't know if it was a plane, but it was at a time when MH370 lost contact, about an hour after it had taken off from Kuala Lumpur.

If it was a plane on fire and if it was MH370, he says, it could not have continued flying and must have gone down in the South China Sea. Commentators around the world found his account believable.

A number of people on the north east coast of the Malaysian peninsula filed police reports stating they saw the bright lights and heard the loud roar of a low-flying aircraft over the South China Sea at about the time MH370 would have flown high overhead on its regular course to Beijing.

Unlike Mr McKay, they said they did not see any fire and their accounts of the direction the mystery aircraft was flying varied, but there appears little doubt they saw something out of the ordinary.

Other 'sightings' put the downed jet in the Maldives islands.

Missing: Searchers scouring huge swathes of the world's oceans for the jet have so far found no sign of it

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Missing: Searchers scouring huge swathes of the world's oceans for the jet have so far found no sign of it

Fishermen in the Indian Ocean island group claimed to have seen 'a low-flying jumbo jet' early in the morning of March 8 after MH370 lost contact with ground control.

One fisherman said: 'I've never seen a jet flying so low over our island before.'

Other residents reported seeing red stripes on the plane as it flew low overhead - colours that were similar to those of Malaysia Airlines.

An official search of the area around the remote island of Kuda Huvadhoo found no debris, but the observers held firm to their stories.

So various apparent sightings, thousands of miles apart, all reveal the enormous problems involved in trying to find the missing jet. None of the 'sightings' can be dismissed.

Almost a year after MH370 went missing, MailOnline examines all the current popular theories and rated them according to what is known so far.

Video released to explain the search efforts for flight MH370

The jet landed on water was seen floating on Andaman Sea

On a flight from Jeddah to Kuala Lumpur that crossed over the Andaman Sea on March 8, Malaysian woman Raja Dalelah, 53, saw what she believed was a plane sitting on the water's surface.

She didn't know about the search that had been started for MH370. She alerted a stewardess who told her to go back to sleep.

'I was shocked to see what looked like the tail and wing of an aircraft on the water,' she said.

Malaysian woman Raja Dalelah, 53, saw what she believed was a plane sitting on the water’s surface

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Malaysian woman Raja Dalelah, 53, saw what she believed was a plane sitting on the water's surface

She spotted it while on a flight from Jeddah to Kuala Lumpur that crossed over the Andaman Sea on March 8

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She spotted it while on a flight from Jeddah to Kuala Lumpur that crossed over the Andaman Sea on March 8

It was only when she told her friends on landing in Kuala Lumpur what she had seen that she learned of the missing jet. She had seen the object at about 2.30pm Malaysian time.

She said she had been able to identify several ships and islands before noticing the silver object that she said was a plane.

But her story was laughed off by pilots who said it would have been impossible to have seen part of an aircraft in the water from 35,000ft or seven miles.

Ms Raja filed an official report with police the same day and has kept to her story.

'I know what I saw,' she said.

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Aircraft are easily spotted flying high in the sky but are almost invisible on the surface when seen from the cabin of an aircraft at high cruising altitude.'

Professor Glees said: 'Eye-witnesses are always poor witnesses, alas, and especially so in aircraft disasters.

'They frequently say there was an explosion and then a crash when film evidence shows the crash comes first and then the explosion. They are not to blame. These things happen in a blink of the eye and are very traumatic.'

Major technical problem so pilots took evasive but doomed action

A catastrophic event such as a fire disabling much of the equipment resulted in the pilots turning the plane back towards the Malaysian peninsula in the hope of landing at the nearest airport.

Satellite data, believable or not, suggests the aircraft did make a turn and theorists say there would be no reason for the pilots to change course unless confronted with an emergency.

Technical problem: A catastrophic event such as a fire disabling much of the equipment is another theory. This picture shows the result of a fire in a similar Boeing 777 jet at Cairo airport in 2011

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Technical problem: A catastrophic event such as a fire disabling much of the equipment is another theory. This picture shows the result of a fire in a similar Boeing 777 jet at Cairo airport in 2011

A fire in a similar Boeing 777 jet parked at Cairo airport in 2011 was found to have been caused by a problem with the first officer's oxygen mask supply tubing.

Stewarts Law, which has litigated in a series of recent air disasters, believes the plane crashed after a fire - similar to the blaze on the Cairo airport runway - broke out in the cockpit.

After an investigation into the Cairo blaze, Egypt's Aircraft Accident Investigation Central Directorate (EAAICD) released their final report which revealed that the fire originated near the first officer's oxygen mask supply tubing.

The cause of the fire could not be conclusively determined, but investigators pinpointed a problem with the cockpit hose used to provide oxygen for the crew in the event of decompression.

Following the 2011 fire, US aircraft owners were instructed to replace the system - it was estimated to cost $2,596 (£1,573) per aircraft. It was not known whether Malaysia Airlines had carried out the change.

If either pilot wanted to crash the plane, why turn it around? So the turn-around suggests they were trying to land as soon as possible because of an emergency.

Professor Glees said: 'The plane turned more than three times. Autopilots won't do this unless someone has set them to do this. Modern jets can suffer catastrophic failures which could include a shutdown of oxygen.

'If there had been an emergency, there was enough time to get a Mayday message out and the responder would not have been turned off deliberately.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'This is plausible. Similar incidents have occurred previously and it is quite possible that this or a very similar technical fault explains the aircraft's disappearance.'

Lithium-ion batteries in the cargo hold exploded

MH370's cargo included a consignment of highly-inflammable lithium-ion batteries. It has been suggested that these ignited, or exploded due to a fire already present, perhaps caused by a tyre bursting into flames on take-off.

Lithium-ion batteries like this one used in laptops were being carried in the cargo hold of the flight (file picture of unconnected battery)

Lithium-ion batteries like this one used in laptops were being carried in the cargo hold of the flight (file picture of unconnected battery)

Pilot Chris Goodfellow posted on the internet that it was possible a poorly-inflated tyre caused a fire in the front landing gear during take off, which has happened in the past.

The smoke would have incapacitated the pilots, leaving the aircraft to cruise on autopilot until it ran out of fuel. A fire fits in with oil rig worker Mike McKay's sighting of what he believes was a plane on fire.

Lithium-ion batteries - which are used in mobile phones and laptops - have been responsible for a number of fires on planes and have even brought aircraft down in recent years.

According to US-based Federal Aviation Administration, lithium-ion batteries carried in the cargo or baggage have been responsible for more than 140 incidents between March 1991 and February 17 this year, it was reported by Malaysiakini.

In one case, UPS Airlines Flight 6 crashed while attempting an emergency landing in September 2010 en route from Dubai to Cologne in Germany.

The MH370 cargo also included mystery items not declared in the manifest, but which were later described by Malaysia Airlines officials as 'radio parts'.

There was a weight discrepancy in the goods listed on the manifest and it was only under pressure from questioners that the airline spoke of radio parts, but doubts about the entire cargo remain.

The mystery remains as to whether those 'radio parts' caused an explosion.

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Whilst lithium-ion batteries are flammable and can cause severe damage to an aircraft, the tyre burst scenario would have been known to the crew on takeoff and they would not have continue their climb without instigating the standard emergency landing gear fire drill.'

Professor Glees said: 'Had the plane come down because of an explosion it would not have executed turns and flown on, and the transponder would not have been turned off.

'Had MH370 exploded, wreckage would have been found long ago.' 

Shot down by the U.S. who feared terror attack on Diego Garcia

The Boeing 777 was shot down by the Americans who feared the aircraft had been hijacked and was about to be used to attack the U.S. military base on Diego Garcia atoll in the Indian Ocean. So conspiracy theorists claim.

And former French airline director Marc Dugain said he had been warned by British intelligence that he was taking risks by investigating this angle.

Shot down: There is a theory that the Boeing 777 was shot down by the Americans who feared the aircraft had been hijacked and was about to be used to attack the U.S. military base on Diego Garcia (right). Former French airline director Marc Dugain (left) believes the Americans shot down the plane

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Shot down: There is a theory that the Boeing 777 was shot down by the Americans who feared the aircraft had been hijacked and was about to be used to attack the U.S. military base on Diego Garcia (right). Former French airline director Marc Dugain (left) believes the Americans shot down the plane

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Shot down: There is a theory that the Boeing 777 was shot down by the Americans who feared the aircraft had been hijacked and was about to be used to attack the U.S. military base on Diego Garcia (right). Former French airline director Marc Dugain (left) believes the Americans shot down the plane

There is no way of checking whether Dugain received such a warning or why he believes the Americans shot down the plane.

But adding to the theory that the aircraft was flown to Diego Garcia, either by the pilot Zaharie or a hijacker, was the claim that on the pilot's home flight simulator was a 'practice' flight to the island.

Professor Glees said: 'The Americans would have no interest in doing anything of the kind and not telling the world.

'In theory, they might wish to shoot down a plane they thought was attacking them but they wouldn't just fire missiles, they'd investigate it first with fighters and would quickly realise that even if it had to be shot down, the world would need to know.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'The U.S. would not have been able to hide this fact and in any event, if it were true, they would have admitted their action as it would have prevented a successful terrorist action on this occasion and acted as a deterrent for future terrorist attacks.'

MH370 and its passengers have been kidnapped by aliens

Aliens abducted the plane - or so five per cent of Americans surveyed by Reason.com believe.

There were a number of recent UFO sightings in Malaysia around the time of the aircraft's disappearance, it was claimed, and one of these 'lifted it away'.

Alexandra Bruce, of Forbidden Knowledge TV, said that aliens had to be involved, based on footage she has seen of something that could only be termed 'a UFO' and on her own analysis of radar data.

Added to the alien theory was a comment by a UFO blogger who said that Malaysia's air force chief, Rodzali Daud, had confirmed that military radar had detected a UFO in an area in the northern Malacca Strait at 2.15am local time about an hour after the plane vanished.

Professor Glees said: 'Next they'll say Elvis was flying the plane.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Most Americans are religious and therefore can hold mystic beliefs. Total nonsense.'

The search location, using ships and underwater vessels, is based on a series of pings believed to be from the aircraft that the British satellite company, Inmarsat, has used in its calculations

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The search location, using ships and underwater vessels, is based on a series of pings believed to be from the aircraft that the British satellite company, Inmarsat, has used in its calculations

Malaysia’s Inspector General of Police, Khalid Abu Bakar put forward the insurance scam suggestion

Malaysia's Inspector General of Police, Khalid Abu Bakar put forward the insurance scam suggestion

It was an insurance scam

The plane was hijacked and brought down by a passenger or a crew member playing an insurance scam so that he or she would die and relatives would benefit from compensation - a suggestion put forward in the early days by none other than Malaysia's Inspector General of Police, Khalid Abu Bakar.

'We are looking at all possibilities,' he told a packed press conference in Kuala Lumpur.

'We are studying the behavioural pattern of all the passengers.'

This, he said, included a passenger who might owe a lot of money to someone.

The police investigations into what caused the plane's fate included questioning workers at an orchard where mangosteens are grown.

This was in case explosives had been planted in a consignment of the fruit that had been loaded onto the aircraft.

Professor Glees said: 'This was a case of mass murder. Insurance scams are in a completely different order of magnitude. And there are the three turns...'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'This is more likely to have been committed by one or other of the pilots rather than by a passenger. Unlikely though this might be, it is none the less it is plausible.'

Espionage between China and the U.S.

Internet writer 'Dark Spectre' has put forward a theory on Reddit.com that the presence on the aircraft of 20 employees of Freescale Semiconductor - a company which manufactures sophisticated surveillance technology - could be the reason for the plane disappearing.

Dark Spectre said China could have been determined to capture a group of private contractors who helped the National Security Agency to conduct spy operations against Beijing.

Referring to the apparent deaths of all on board, he asked what would 200 lives be to the Chinese for the chance of find out the scope of the US's intrusion?

The problem with his theory is that the plane was flying to Beijing anyway, so why try some complex kidnapping?

Professor Glees said: 'So where is the plane? If this theory were correct, the plane wouldn't have disappeared.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'It is highly unlikely that either China or the US would commit mass murder in such a public way for so little advantage.

'In any event, it would not explain the aircraft being re-routed.'

Some believe Israeli agents planned to carry out an attack on Kuala Lumpur’s tallest building, the Petronas Twin Towers

Some believe Israeli agents planned to carry out an attack on Kuala Lumpur's tallest building, the Petronas Twin Towers

Mossad was to blame

The Israeli secret service did it, according to another suggestion doing the rounds of the internet.

Conspiracy theorists, who often blame Mossad for most mysteries, say Israeli agents planned to carry out a 9/11-style attack on Kuala Lumpur's tallest building, the Petronas Twin Towers, and blame it on Iran.

There were, conspiracy believers point out, two Iranian nationals travelling on false passports among the passengers.

However, it transpired that the men had bought the stolen passports to travel to Europe to start new lives in Germany and Denmark.

Niloufar Vaezi Tehrani, the mother of one of the men, Pouria Nourmohammadi, confirmed she had been waiting for him to arrive at Frankfurt airport after he was due to change flights in Beijing.

If MH370 had been commandeered to be crashed, why wasn't it flown into the towers?

Professor Glees said: 'What on earth would be the advantage to Mossad of hijacking the plane? And if Mossad had hijacked it, they would not then have destroyed it without trace. What would be the point of that? If Mossad do a thing, they do it right.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Anti-Semites will blame everything and anything on the Jews. Utter nonsense. This scenario is to be treated with the contempt it deserves.'

Desperate: The relatives of those on board Malaysia Airlines MH370 still do not know the fate of their loved ones

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Desperate: The relatives of those on board Malaysia Airlines MH370 still do not know the fate of their loved ones

MH370 was flown to a remote hangar to be used by terrorists

Despite the hopes of relatives of MH370 passengers that their loved ones are still alive after being caught up in a plot to hijack the aircraft and hide it in a remote hangar - to be used at a later date for an evil purpose - this scenario appears too far-fetched to be believed.

The 'hideouts' include a remote area of north west Australia over which no other aircraft fly, disused wartime air strips on islands and one of the former Soviet satellite nations.

Aside from a hijacking team being able to hold 239 passengers and crew hostage for almost a year without a scrap of evidence to suggest that this had happened is the question why the plane hasn't been put into operation for a wicked plot by now.

Following on from remote hangar conspiracy theory is the claim in Russian newspaper, Moskovsky Komsomolets, that it had been told by a military source that the plane is in Afghanistan after being hijacked by terrorists, the leader being a person called Hitch.

The passengers, it is claimed, have been divided into seven groups and are living in mud huts near the border with Pakistan.

But to have reached Afghanistan, MH370 would have had to fly through the airspace of several countries and it would have been picked up by their radar because it would have broken away from regular, plotted air routes.

Professor Glees said: ‘Not implausible, not to be rejected out of hand. But if the purpose was to hijack the plane and use the hostages to barter with some government, something must have happened to have put a spoke in the wheel.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'It could be done but would be impossible to do so in total secret.'

Hijacked and shot down over Ukraine to discredit Russia

MH370 was destroyed when it was shot down over Ukraine, in a devious plot by the Americans.

Several websites have claimed that after hijacking MH370, a CIA team flew it to Holland and then used it under the flight number MH17 to fly over Ukraine where it was deliberated crashed by US agents to discredit Russia.

MH17 flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur was travelling over the conflict-hit region when it disappeared from radar.

Several websites have claimed that after hijacking MH370, a CIA team flew it to Holland and then used it under the flight number MH17 to fly over Ukraine where it was deliberated crashed. The wreckage of MH17 is pictured here

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Several websites have claimed that after hijacking MH370, a CIA team flew it to Holland and then used it under the flight number MH17 to fly over Ukraine where it was deliberated crashed. The wreckage of MH17 is pictured here

A total of 283 passengers, including 80 children, and 15 crew members were killed.

If such a bizarre plot was even discussed, why would the Americans hijack a plane then fly it to Holland, before deliberately crashing it - when all they had to do was hijack the real MH17?

A second 'swap' theory debated in The Conversation website says the biggest conspiracy claims that after being hijacked, MH370 was flown somewhere secret, stored for a while, then it was rigged with explosives before being flown over Donestsk and blown up in order to implicate one of the parties.

No explanation appears to have been given for the passengers who had booked on the real MH17.

Professor Glees said: 'This comes from the tooth fairy's book of make-believe.

'We knew within minutes of the shooting down of MH17. MH370 was nowhere near Ukraine and could not have got anywhere near without every government knowing.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Complete and utter nonsense. It would have required the collusion of Malaysia Air, it's staff and crew, not to mention hundreds of passengers.'

Malaysia’s former Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohamad

Malaysia's former Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohamad

The CIA know, says Malaysia's former Prime Minister

Malaysia's former Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohamad claimed on his blog that there has been a cover up and the CIA and Malaysia know exactly what happened to the plane.

'Airplanes don't just disappear. Certainly not these days with all the powerful communication systems, radio and satellite tracking and film-less cameras which operate almost indefinitely and possess huge storage capacities,' he wrote.

Dr Mahathir, 88, who was Malaysia's prime minister between 1981 and 2003, said the missing flight's communication system 'must have been disabled'.

'Or else the flight of MH370 would have been tracked by satellites which normally provide data on all commercial flights, inclusive of data on location, kind of aircraft, flight number, departure airport and destination.

'But the data seems unavailable. The plane just disappeared seemingly from all screens.'

It is questionable that a modern aircraft could vanish without a trace, apparently baffling the world's scientists, analysts and all manner of aviation experts.

Is Dr Mahathir right? Does a government, a government agency, a military force, know something?

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Malaysia's former Prime Minister has been reading too many conspiracy books. Political nonsense.'

Professor Glees said: 'Clearly someone somewhere knew something at some stage. But that someone may now be dead or not talking.'

The plane was brought down by remote control

It was a high-tech plot, say the conspiracy theorists.

The plane crashed by remote control with someone accessing the jet's computer and reprogramming everything, causing it to go down.

However, the woman who came up with the theory - Dr Sally Leivesley, a former British Home Office official - was revealed as running her own company which trains businesses and governments to defend themselves against terrorist attacks.

And how was anyone going to target the computer of that particular aircraft - and why?

Professor Glees said: 'Sally is a really smart lady whose views are widely respected. But why would anyone want to bring the plane down and then keep it a secret?

'Bringing it down would have been done for a purpose. What would such a purpose be, and how would bringing a plane down serve it? What would be the point of destroying a plane and then saying nothing about the reason for its destruction?'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'Another nonsense theory by someone with no technical knowledge of modern civil aircraft.

'Dr Leivesley has jumped onto this bandwagon with scant regard for the facts. Implausible.'

Dr Sally Leivesley, a former British Home Office official, said the plane crashed by remote control with someone accessing the jet's computer and reprogramming everything

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Dr Sally Leivesley, a former British Home Office official, said the plane crashed by remote control with someone accessing the jet's computer and reprogramming everything

Missing: MH370 took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport at 12.41am on March 8 2014 for an approximate six-hour flight to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew

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Missing: MH370 took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport at 12.41am on March 8 2014 for an approximate six-hour flight to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew

MH370 'hid' from radar by shadowing a Singapore Airlines flight

MH370 flew in the 'shadow' of another jet - a Singapore Airlines flight - through Indian and Afghanistan airspace, using that aircraft as a shield to avoid radar.

It could have done this successfully, said blogger Keith Ledgerwood, because its own transponder was switched off.

To have succeeded in doing this, and for whatever reason, the two planes would have had to be within 3,300ft of one another and being that close, the Singapore Airlines crew would have known about the other aircraft and reported it.

Professor Glees said: 'This theory relies on there having been conspiracy and collusion. But no evidence of either has been presented and it would not be easy to hide either, indeed easy to uncover both.'

Mr Rosenschein said: 'This is possible but highly unlikely to be done without detection.'

The experts' verdicts

Professor Anthony Glees: Politically motivated hijack

'At the time, and for many weeks after the disappearance of MH370, I thought the evidence pointed towards a hijack with a political motive,' he explained.

'Bearing the destination of the plane in mind, my thinking was that this was a Uighur plot and that the plane was flown to some Islamic state or, if the hijackers were planning another 9/11 but on Beijing, the plane was probably shot down somewhere over China.

'We know that on the one hand the Uighurs had Islamist terrorists among their numbers, that they liked attacking transport centres and could use primitive but effective weapons. On the other we know that the Chinese security forces believe that the best way of dealing with Uighur Islamists is to try to disrupt them whilst preventing any news of their measures from creeping out.'

Alastair Rosenschein, former BA 747 pilot: Technical malfunction

'My personal belief is that a technical malfunction resulted in a depressurisation followed by a hypoxia event causing the flight crew to pass out,' he said.

'The aircraft flew on until it ran out of fuel and crashed in the Southern Indian Ocean.'

 

 
 
Rumor of the Shootdown of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370

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http://nghiadx.blogspot.com

THE SHOOTDOWN OF MALAYSIAN AIRLINES FLIGHT MH370

At 0130 hours local time last Saturday, March 8th (this is being written on the 15th) a Chinese SSK, believed to be a 636 Kiloclass, shot down a Malaysian airliner, Boeing 777-2H6ER, 9M-MRO, Captain Zaharie Shah in command, off the coast of South Vietnam.  The Chinese murdered a total of 239 people, all the souls on board.

 

The Kilo surfaced but stayed hull-down, i.e. presented a low radar signature.  She fired a Chinese-made copy of the excellent Hughes Aircraft AIM-54A Phoenix missile, supplied to Iran in the 1970s.  The Chinese version appears to be multi-mode, with infra-red, terminal radar and semi-active homing guidance.  It appears as though semi-active mode was selected.  The Kilo was to the starboard of the 777’s track, possibly having sortied from the Hainan Submarine Base.


Interception range appears to have been fairly short, perhaps 25 miles, well within the capabilities of the Phoenix, which famously could engage targets over 100 nautical miles from their F-14 mother-ships.

THE SOUTHERN OCEAN ‘OBJECTS’.

Sometime during the night of the 19th and 20th somebody appears to have dumped some wreckage over a very deep part of the Southern Ocean.  It looks a bit like it came off an old 747-200 in a boneyard.  Since the White House have been frantically leaning on the Pentagon to join in the cover up of this Chinese atrocity I would not be at all surprised to learn these bits had been offloaded out the back of a C-5 or C-17 out of Diego Garcia.

The choice of the Southern Ocean may even have been a nod in our direction, since Veterans Todayis the only media organisation in the world to report this story with intellectual rigor and a regard for the truth.  We suggested last week, in jest, that the next search area would be the Southern Ocean!

The ‘objects’ have sunk, or if they have not sunk they have made themselves scarce.  They have not been positively ID’d as coming off a 777, unlike the over-wing hatch in the target area, i.e where the plane was shot down.   You can bet your bottom dollar the boys at Boeing were asked if they could recognise that bit of wreckage and I gather they said ‘yes, with a bit of computer enhancement’.  All the bits on a 777 are tooled off a computer and you can do amazing things with images of wreckage.

The silence out of Chicago and Seattle on that all-important piece of wreckage is deafening.  My understanding is that it is off a 777, but that Boeing cannot say it is definitely off a Dash 200.  They don’t need to.  We don’t have any missing Dash 100s or 300s off South Vietnam.  There is no problem with minimal wreckage on the surface by the way – so far as I know the plane went in hull intact, i.e. she did not break up in mid-air.  That will give us a pretty tight wreckage field on the seafloor.  She went in fast and steep, and we would not expect to find a large amount of wreckage on the surface.  The Phoenix has a proximity fuze and we would expect warhead detonation before impact, as with Air France.

Could somebody please tell me what in the cotton-pickin’ hell would a highly experienced professional pilot be doing with a Boeing 777 over the Southern Ocean, flying towards Antarctica, way past the Point of No Return, with a better chance of finding an open Macdonalds than an open runway able to take his plane?  For the avoidance of doubt the boys at Boeing, innovative company that they are, have not yet taken to offering ski-equipped versions of the 777.

THE EYE-WITNESSES

Oh yes.  We have three live eye-witnesses to the shoot-down now and they all say pretty much the same thing – blazing airliner falling out of the sky.  I think the better view is that the fire they saw was either missile exhaust, the warhead explosion, or the Rolls-Royce Trents flaming out as the plane nosed over into her terminal dive.

ACARS

Like any networked system ACARS can be disabled remotely.  The idea that you need a Bad Guy turning up on your doorstep and physically accessing your computer before he can insert a virus only needs to be stated for its absurdity to be apparent.  The transponder was probably turned off by inserted lines of software code, more of a Chinese specialty than Peking Duck.

THE MALDIVES

We are now being treated to eye-witness accounts of a ‘red and white jumbo jet’ flying low over the Maldives on the day in question.  If the plane was cruising as low as reported then she would not have made the Maldives.  The range charts accompanying this feeble-minded nonsense are for an airplane at altitude.  Range decreases dramatically below FL300 (30,000’).  The expression ‘Jumbo Jet’ is normally taken as referring to a 747 and this somewhat dubious sighting does not appear to be of a 777 at all.  Sounds more like an Air India 74 to me.

I stand by my story.  If those who have applied pressure to me this week to change it (this does notinclude Gordon Duff or anyone at Veterans Today, who have backed me to the hilt – thanks guys) want me to change my opinion then please present me with facts, or credible arguments.  Pressure won’t work.  Rational arguments backed by solid evidence will.

Captain Shah appears to have seen the incoming.  Its exhaust trail would have been clearly visible at night.  If the missile was in semi-active homing mode and he did not deactivate his radar then it would have locked on, following him as he turned back toward the Malaysian coast.   The Chinese sub jammed his HF and VHF frequencies, as did the Iranian Kilo in the Air France AF447 shootdown in 2009, preventing a Mayday call.

As the unlawful seizure of my book and working papers in 2012 pushed back publication of Spyhunter by at least nine months airline pilots are unaware of my recommendation, following Air France, that the primary mode of communicating a Mayday message in the event of missile attack should be ACARS, or Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System.  Being satellite-based and digital it is much more difficult to jam.  The Bad Guys of course are aware of Spyhunter, which was after all seized and thoroughly analyzed, reportedly sending Dachau and Peking into shock, given its high level of accuracy and the devastating revelations it contains (if all y’all will excuse the ad the publishers, June Press, in Totnes, Devonshire, are now accepting advance orders – publication is scheduled for next month, price £25, ISBN 978-0-9927501-0-7).

The latest reporting, that the airplane’s ACARS was disabled shortly after MH370 crossed the Malaysian coast, has the ring of truth about it.  ACARS can be disabled, although it is not as easy as jamming radios.  Good pilots – and Captain Shah was a good pilot – follow their training in emergencies.  That training, sadly, is inadequate to deal with missile attack.

All airline pilots on transoceanic crossings should be trained to treat ACARS disablement as an immediate, life-threatening emergency.  In my as ever humble opinion (and all y’all know how humble I am!) they should:

(1)   Secure the cabin for radical evasive maneuvers.

(2)   If they are within 30 minutes of land, turn immediately towards it, going to TOGA power as they do so.  If not, power should be reduced immediately to flight idle and an emergency descent initiated to no higher than FL100, with immediate cabin depressurization, squawking 7700.

(3)   The APU, if online, should be shut down immediately (that was probably how KAL007 was acquired).

(4)   The pilot not in command should immediately deactivate all onboard radar systems, including the radar altimeters, declare an emergency online, if they still have connectivity, and by radio, if they still have a carrier wave.  If the radios are jammed the pilots should assume that their aircraft has been acquired by hostile fire control radar and is about to come under medium range surface to air missile attack. Passengers should be advised to brace for high-speed missile impact and don, but not inflate, their life jackets.  Under NO CIRCUMSTANCES should the pilot in command attempt to outclimb or outrun the missile.  He or she should assume a missile speed of Mach 3.5 plus in an ascending attack and up to Mach 5 for a long-range descending attack on semi-ballistic trajectory.

(5)  All crew including cabin crew should be alerted to watch for incoming.

(6)  The pilot in command should assume terminal radar guidance and delay evasive maneuvers for as long as possible, and not before visual confirmation of the incoming.  Evasive maneuvers should be radical and the airplane should be taken to her airframe g-limits.  The trick to evading a guided missile in an unarmed aircraft not equipped with countermeasures is to leave your maneuver until the last possible moment and make it as radical as you safely can, in order to break the missile’s lock on you, and

(7)  If successful the pilot in command should assume a reload capability within 15 minutes, go to TOGA power and escape the target area at the fastest possible speed, disregarding all airframe speed limits and the 250 knot limit below FL100.  He or she should assume that the airframe may have been overstressed, maintain 7700 emergency squawk and order the pilot not in command to broadcast a Mayday message via any viable communication system.  As the airplane heads away from Dodge radio jamming should cease.      

THE US NAVY HITS BACK

Happily the US Navy, a.k.a. the Good Guys, fought back.  It looks like the USS Pinckney (DDG-91), God Bless her, whacked the Chinese Kilo, hence the diesel slick on the surface of the ocean, in an area where no surface vessel was reported.  Aviation fuel is light and disperses.   Diesel fuel in an area of suspected hostile SSK activity + no diesel-powered surface vessel in the area + powerful surface combatant with stand-off anti-submarine capability within range usually = subsmash.

Way to go the Pinckney!  So far as I know (Gordon?) she could be the first US Navy surface vessel ever to have engaged the PLA Navy in combat.  My respectful congratulations to Commander Frank Okata and her crew, especially the dedicated team in the Combat Information Center.  Her job done, on behalf of humanity and Western Civilization, she has now docked at Changi.  I am not hearing that there were cheering crowds, or even a brass band to play Anchors Aweigh, which is disgraceful.  If you live in her home port, which I think is still San Diego, please make sure that you give her a big welcome when she gets home.  She deserves a battle star.  Someone should paint the silhouette of a Chinese submarine in an appropriate place.  It could always be covered up for visiting weanies from Washington.

I gather there were some frantic messages from Peking after the realization hit home that there had been a subsmash in the South China Sea.  I also gather that the White House were pretty frantic too, indeed there was probably an outbreak of mini-hysteria, although I didn’t ring the Situation Room to enquire (yes I have that number, but it’s only for emergencies, not for collecting scuttlebutt for this week’s column!!).    They are now sending US warships on wild goose chases in the Indian Ocean.  It’ll be the Great Southern Ocean next, indeed we are now hearing that the search has been extended toKazakhstan.  Any moment now I am expecting Thames Valley Police to join the search, making house to house enquiries in Berkshire to see if anybody has seen a lost Malaysian Boeing 777, possibly on Slough High Street.  The search will be conducted anywhere but where the plane was shot down and the Kilo followed her to the bottom.

Pinckney should get a Presidential Unit Citation.  If she were a Royal Navy vessel there would be an extra rum ration, or at least there would be if Royal Navy men-of-war still carried rum!  Sadly we wimped out on the rum ration some years ago – something about the First Sea Lord not wanting sailors tanked up on rum running loose around guided weapons systems.  Idiot!

At this time a former Secretary of the Navy of my acquaintance is not denying a word of this.  I hope that airmen and women everywhere will spare a thought and a prayer for poor Captain Shah and his dedicated crew.

MOTIVE

It seems there was someone of interest on the plane.  There is a bitter internal power struggle going on in China right now.  It seems like a powerful faction, backed by the DVD, was behind the attack.  The other faction are Chinese nationalists, rather than ideological communists, closer to those nice people the Kuomintang than any communist party member has a right to be.  It’s interesting that most of the outrage seems to be coming from nationalist outlets in China.

THE AIRLINE

Malaysian Airlines grew out of Malaysia-Singapore Airlines, which in turn grew out of the original Malaya Airways, which started out in 1946 with a single Airspeed Consul.  The Consul was very much a mini-airliner!  Older readers, especially those who served in South East Asia, may well recall the MSA Boeing 707s, with their attractive yellow livery.

They are a good airline.  I’ve only flown with them twice, each time in first class, from Melbourne to KL and KL to London.  Service was excellent, and there were showers in the first class lounge at KL.  Their aircraft are well-maintained and their crews well-trained.  I see no conceivable basis for criticising Captain Shah, a dedicated and vastly experienced airman, his crew, nor the airline.

THE PLANE

The Boeing 777 has an excellent safety record.  There have only been two 777 crashes of any note, and one of those (BA Flight 38 at Heathrow) was down to Chicom/DVD sabotage of the FADEC software controlling the engines.  The engines – Rolls-Royce Trents – have an equally good record.  There is no reason at all to suspect a catastrophic failure of the airframe, or engine failure.  The aircraft could have maintained her altitude of FL350 (35,000 ft) on one engine only.

WEATHER

Flying conditions that night were good.  You can forget weather.

IED

You can also forget terrorism.  Had the airplane been destroyed in mid-air we would be seeing a wide distribution of wreckage.  Hijacking is also out, not least as the hijack squawk code was not activated.

COUNTERMEASURES

All countries should now follow the sensible Israeli example and fit countermeasures to civilian airliners carrying out ocean crossings.  They need ECM as well as flares, to defeat terminal radar guidance and fire control radar.  They also need missile lock-on warning systems.  Special arrangements should be made as regards hull and passenger insurance.  Sensibly this could be picked up by the state of registry, with recovery in due course from the attacking state, either by seizure of assets, or reparations after military defeat.

NSA and ONI were on the ball, so it looks like naval retaliation is well in hand.  Losing their Kilo will make the Chicoms think twice.  I suspect the NSA got some nice overheads – missile exhaust at night isvery visible, and the Phoenix is a Big Mama of an air-to-air missile.  ONI didn’t need much persuading of my analysis after AF447 that the Phoenix could be modified for Surface to Air launch, as the US Navy sensibly considered a 12-cell Phoenix as a successor to Sea Sparrow.  The boys at Hughes put together a serious proposal on that one.

Well done the NSA!  Another big intelligence success.  (As Gordon knows my policy is one of ‘all the way with the NSA’!).  If Obama whinges – and we know what a whinger he is – the boys at Meade could always drop a copy of that DNA report around to Congress, acting on an FOI Act request.  That would mean Joe Biden as President.  If Joe’s boys want a briefing they know where to reach me.

THE UKRAINE (NO MOVIE THIS WEEK)

This is coming along nicely.  Bad Guys are getting c….p on big time.  The Good Guys should win the vote in Crimea tomorrow (Sunday).  The Russians and Byelorussians are reported to be moving motorized rifle and armored divisions up to the Ukrainian frontier and the Russian Air Force is bringing its master target plot for the Ukraine up to date.  If the balloon goes up the Ukrainians will be rolled over big time.

TONY BENN

I have already expressed my condolences to the Labour Party and I extend them to Tony’s family.  We hardly agreed about anything after the 1980s but we always got on well, I liked and respected him and I was very sorry indeed to learn of his passing yesterday.  He was a true patriot.  A love of our country and our people informed his entire political career.  No one could say that he was not a conviction politician and I admired him for that.  We were hardly close, but we never had a cross word.

710 KNUS

Apologies to listeners in the Denver area to 710 KNUS.  I was due to be interviewed at 0700 Mountain Time yesterday, on the Peter Boyles Show.  I do occasionally make the odd cock-up (this is my natural humility showing through again!) and of course I forgot that your clocks went forward last Sunday!  Aaarrghh!  I am so accustomed to Mountain Time being 7 hours behind that I just diaried it for 1400 Zulu without thinking.  The boys at KNUS have been kind enough to say they will reschedule.

March 15th 2014

 

Is this proof that MH370 crashed off the coast of Australia? Towelette with Malaysia Airlines logo washes up on Western Australia beach

  • The package washed up on a Cervantes beach in Western Australia
  • It has now been sent to Canberra for further testing and verification
  • Experts think a package this small could travel these long distances
  • It comes just days after the one year anniversary of the disappearance
  • MH370 disappeared with all 239 people on board on March 8, 2014
  • Relatives of the passengers gathered to mourn and demand answers

In a new twist in the continuing saga of missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, a towelette that was washed up on a Western Australia beach is now being examined to try and find out if it could have come from the disappeared plane.

The small pre-moistened paper towel that was in a Malaysia Airlines sealed packet has been sent to Canberra for testing and verification after being found by a couple walking along a beach in Cervantes in July last year, Nine News reported.

The news comes just days after the one year anniversary of the plane's disappearance, with 239 people on board.

Kingsley and Vicki Miller discovered the unopened packet at Cervantes, 200 kilometres north of Perth, and said it was ‘unopened, which was very unusual’.

Scroll down for video

A reenactment of the discovery of the towelette that washed up on a Western Australia beach which may have been from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370

A reenactment of the discovery of the towelette that washed up on a Western Australia beach which may have been from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370

The package was washed up on a Cervantes beach hundreds of kilometres away from where the plane is said to have disappeared

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The package was washed up on a Cervantes beach hundreds of kilometres away from where the plane is said to have disappeared

The small package has been sent to sent to Canberra for further testing

The small package has been sent to sent to Canberra for further testing

'If it had of been opened and found lying there it would have been completely different,' Mr Miller said.

The Daily Telegraph reported that experts believe it's possible for a small package such as the towelette to travel long distances without sustaining damage.

However, experts believe that the package may not provide any helpful information as to the disappearance of the plane.

'A 6cm x 8cm moist towelette in wrapping branded with the Malaysia Airlines logo was found at Thirsty Point on 2 July 2014. It was handed in to the WA police,' said a spokesperson for the Australian Transport Safety Bureau.

'It is unlikely, however, that such a common item with no unique identifier could be conclusively linked with MH370,' reported The Sydney Morning Herald.

The plane dropped off the civilian radar after its transponder and other equipment were switched off shortly after takeoff from Kuala Lumpur. It was then tracked by Malaysia’s military radar heading towards the Indian Ocean.

Kingsley and Vicki Miller discovered the unopened packet at Cervantes, 200 kilometres north of Perth

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Kingsley and Vicki Miller discovered the unopened packet at Cervantes, 200 kilometres north of Perth

The MH370 flight disappeared on the May 8 with 239 people on board

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The MH370 flight disappeared on the May 8 with 239 people on board

Malaysian Airlines towelette washes up on WA beach

The anniversary of the plane's disappearance was matched by a report which revealed that the battery of an underwater locator beacon on the flight had expired more than a year before the incident.

The update on the progress of the probe surrounding the Malaysia Airlines plane indicates those looking for the aircraft would have had less chance of finding it. 

Apart from the anomaly of the beacon, the report devoted many of its 584 pages to describe the complete normality of the flight - shedding little light on one of aviation's biggest mysteries.

The significance of the expired battery was not immediately apparent, except indicating that searchers would have had lesser chance of locating the plane, even if they were in its vicinity.

The report said: ‘The sole objective of the investigation is the prevention of future accidents or incidents, and not for the purpose to apportion blame or liability.’

The big question: Artist Sudarsan Pattnaik creates a sand sculpture of MH370 on Puri beach in Odisha, India

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The big question: Artist Sudarsan Pattnaik creates a sand sculpture of MH370 on Puri beach in Odisha, India

Standing together: Relatives of MH370 passengers attend an event today marking the one-year anniversary of its disappearance in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

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Standing together: Relatives of MH370 passengers attend an event today marking the one-year anniversary of its disappearance in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Video released to explain the search efforts for flight MH370

Whilst the battery had expired on the beacon of the Flight Data Recorder, the report said that the battery on the locator beacon of the cockpit voice recorder was working.

However, in a statement on Monday, Malaysia Airlines said that a similar beacon was also installed with the solid state cockpit voice recorder and its battery life was still good.

Relatives of passengers and crew marked the anniversary of the day the plane went missing, under a heavy police presence.

Chinese relatives had planned to commemorate the disappearance of the Boeing 777 at a number of sites in Beijing, including the Malaysian embassy, the airport and the Lama Temple, a popular Tibetan Buddhist place of worship and tourist site.

Sadness: A relative of MH370 passengers holds a sign reading 'Dad I miss U!' outside the Lama Temple today

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Sadness: A relative of MH370 passengers holds a sign reading 'Dad I miss U!' outside the Lama Temple today

Relatives of MH370 victims: (Clockwise from top left)  Li Jiuying holds a picture of her brother Li Guohai;  Jacquita Gonzales holds a portrait of her husband,  in-flight supervisor Patrick Gomes; Liu Kun displays a photo of his brother Liu Qiang; and Chinese woman Dai Shuqin, who lost five members of her family

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Relatives of MH370 victims: (Clockwise from top left) Li Jiuying holds a picture of her brother Li Guohai; Jacquita Gonzales holds a portrait of her husband, in-flight supervisor Patrick Gomes; Liu Kun displays a photo of his brother Liu Qiang; and Chinese woman Dai Shuqin, who lost five members of her family

Remembered: Jie Yie, four, holds a picture of her grandmother Lee Sew Chu and her aunt Ng May Li who were aboard MH370, in Kuala Lumpur today

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Remembered: Jie Yie, four, holds a picture of her grandmother Lee Sew Chu and her aunt Ng May Li who were aboard MH370, in Kuala Lumpur today

CAPTAIN HAD 'NO KNOWN HISTORY OF ANXIETY OR FAMILY STRESSES'

Flight Captain: Zaharie Ahmad Shah

Flight Captain: Zaharie Ahmad Shah

The physical and mental well-being of Flight Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah was examined by the report, which said he had no known history of apathy, anxiety or irritability.

‘There were no significant changes in his lifestyle, interpersonal conflict or family stresses,’ it said.

It also said there were ‘no behavioural signs of social isolation, change in habits or interest, self-neglect, drug or alcohol abuse’ by the captain, his first officer and the cabin crew.

Financial checks also showed nothing abnormal about their gross monthly income and spending pattern. It said the captain held several bank accounts and two national trust funds.

He had two houses and three vehicles, but there was no record of him having a life insurance policy.

Co-pilot: First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid

Co-pilot: First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid

The co-pilot, First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid, had two saving accounts and a national trust fund account.

He owned two cars and ‘spent money on the upkeep’ of these vehicles. ‘He does not have much savings in his bank account. He has a life insurance policy,’ it said.

Dozens of uniformed security sealed the street around the diplomatic mission, while relatives said they had opted to avoid the airport as police were out in force.

About 30 visited the Lama Temple, with around 10 entering the site in groups of two or three to pay their personal respects, as if attempting to keep a low profile.

The remainder waited outside the temple in a group, wearing T-shirts saying ‘Pray for MH370’, and waving placards to photographers reading ‘Keep searching for MH370’.

Meanwhile, Voice 370 - a support group for the relatives - hosted a ‘Day of Remembrance’ at a shopping centre in Kuala Lumpur with songs, poems and prayers.

Grace Subathirai Nathan, whose mother Anne Daisy was on the plane, said: ‘It is important to highlight to the public that we still don't have any answers and that we must pursue the search.’

The Malaysian prime minister said he still is hopeful the plane will be found.

Najib Razak said: ‘The lack of answers and definitive proof - such as aircraft wreckage - has made this more difficult to bear.

‘Together with our international partners, we have followed the little evidence that exists. Malaysia remains committed to the search, and hopeful that MH370 will be found.’

While the country's government has already formally declared the disappearance of the plane as an accident, and said all those on board are presumed dead, relatives of those on the flight have said they are frustrated by the lack of answers.

Ministers from Australia, China and Malaysia are expected to meet next month to decide on the next course of action for the wide-ranging search.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said his government would provide ‘all needed service to every next of kin’ and help uphold their ‘legitimate and lawful rights and interests’.

Most of the plane's passengers were Chinese.

‘A year has passed, the plane has not been located, but the search effort will continue,’ Mr Wang told a news conference in Beijing. ‘Today must be a difficult day for the next of kin. Our hearts are with you.’ 

As his country said prayers on Sunday for those who were on board the missing flight, Malaysia's Prime Minister said no words could describe their pain.

'The lack of answers and definitive proof - such as aircraft wreckage - has made this more difficult to bear,' said Mr Najib Razak.

'No words can describe the pain the families of those on board are going through.'

Air Crash Investigation looks into the doomed MH370 flight

Search and rescue missions were conducted for the flight off the coast of Perth 

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Search and rescue missions were conducted for the flight off the coast of Perth

The Department of Defence launched an underwater vehicle to locate the plane off the Australian coast

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The Department of Defence launched an underwater vehicle to locate the plane off the Australian coast

China's Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, said in Beijing that the search for the Malaysia Airlines flight which vanished one year ago today will not stop.

'The search for MH370 will continue,' said Mr Wang, echoing the previously-spoken commitment of the countries involved in the hunt for the aircraft - Australia, Malaysia and China - in the southern Indian Ocean.

In Kuala Lumpur, Mr Najib spoke of the joint effort, adding in his official statement that 'together with our international partners, we have followed the little evidence that exists.

'Malaysia remains committed to the search and hopeful that MH370 will be found.'

Although Mr Abbott said he was confident the aircraft would be found as 40 per cent of 60,000 square kilometres of deep ocean off the coast of Western Australian had been scrutinised and another 60,000sq km to be covered if necessary, he added that the search had to end at some stage.

'It is one of the great mysteries of the 21st century and I know that there will be a nagging doubt in the minds of billions of people until such time as we can find that plane,' he told reporters in Sydney on Sunday.

'It can't go on forever but, as long as there are reasonable leads, the search will go on.' 

TIMELINE OF THE MH370 INVESTIGATION: SEARCHES, DEBRIS AND THEORIES

It is one year since Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 went missing. Here is a timeline of the main events over the last 12 months.

2014

  • March 8 - The Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 takes off from Kuala Lumpur at 12.41am local time bound for Beijing, carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew. The plane is last seen on military radar at 2.14am, heading west over the Strait of Malacca. Half an hour later the airline reveals to the public that it has lost contact with the plane. The plane was due to land at around 6.30am.
  • March 10 - Vietnamese aircraft search for a plane door spotted in their waters but find nothing. A day later the hunt is widened to cover a 115-nautical mile radius involving 34 aircraft and 40 ships from several countries.
  • March 13 - Malaysian authorities expand their search for the missing jet into the Andaman Sea and beyond after acknowledging it could have flown for several more hours after its last contact with the ground.
  • March 15 - Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak says the missing airliner was deliberately diverted and continued flying for more than six hours after losing contact with the ground.
  • March 8 to April 24 - The search area covers the South China Sea, the Straits of Malacca, the Andaman Sea and the southern Indian Ocean.
  • April 24 - The search and rescue phase becomes a search and recovery phase, with it moving a few days later to an underwater phase using an autonomous underwater vehicle and a bathymetry survey covering an area around 430 miles (692km) long and 50 miles (80km) wide.
  • June 2014 - Australian authorities issue a preliminary report in which they theorise that MH370's crew became incapacitated, possibly due to oxygen starvation, with the plane continuing on autopilot.
  • August 28 - Australia's deputy prime minister, Warren Truss, says the aircraft 'might have turned south a little earlier than we have previously expected'.
  • September 19 - After a four-month lull, it is announced that the underwater search, involving depths of up to 3.7 miles (6km), would resume at the end of September.
  • October 2014 - The new underwater search involves ships dragging sonar devices called towfish through the water about 330ft (100m) above the seabed to hunt for wreckage. The towfish are equipped with jet fuel sensors and can transmit data to those on board the vessels.

2015

  • January - Senior Boeing 777 captain Simon Hardy suggests the missing aircraft's final resting place is in the Indian Ocean just outside the far south-western edge of the core search area.
  • January 28 - Malaysia's Department of Civil Aviation (DCA) officially declares the incident 'an accident'. The DCA says it had concluded the aircraft exhausted its fuel 'over a defined area of the southern Indian Ocean'. The DCA adds that efforts to find the plane will continue.
  • March 7 - Malaysia's transport minister, Liow Tiong Lai, says data will be re-examined and a new plan formulated if the plane is not found by the end of May.

 

 

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