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Serious MH370: The pilot did it.

Devil Within

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
MH370: Special Investigation - Part one | 60 Minutes
[video=youtube;ZQHl5SmA08A]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQHl5SmA08A[/video]

MH370: Special Investigation - Part two | 60 Minutes
[video=youtube;Dmw0evr6uvI]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dmw0evr6uvI[/video]
 

greedy and cunning

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Its really a diversion mission
1] if u are derange pilot and want to destroy the plane
would u make such elaborate plan ?
isnt it easier just crash it into south china sea or some mountain in malaya ?

it is saying someone going to kill himself would make plan to travel to KL
to jump from PETRONAS Twin Towers.

2] next they said the plane turned left , right , made U turn ,
flying over countries or in the air space of these countries.
their air defence system must be out of order at the same time.
what if it is an enemy fight jet ?
 

tanwahtiu

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911 2 towers and tower 7 were destroyed through control demolitions.

Mh370 was a control plane by CIA. It is down or diverted for political and trade reason like the opium war against China.
 

virus

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eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
he's an anwar diehard supporter. if he waited for a few more years for his release, he would have ditched the plane (no pun intended), oops i mean plan.
 

zeebjii

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MH370: Special Investigation - Part one | 60 Minutes
[video=youtube;ZQHl5SmA08A]
MH370: Special Investigation - Part two | 60 Minutes
[video=youtube;Dmw0evr6uvI]

OK, I am more interested to know what exactly he did, and what happened to the fucking plane?
 

ToaPehGong

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Every missing airliner was eventually found. Will this plane go into history as the first one to be missing forever?
 

Hypocrite-The

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v2

Indonesian fisherman has GPS coordinates of MH370 location to Malaysian authorities

JANUARY 17, 201912:33pm



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The Mystery of Flight MH370: As the search continues, there are some theories not being reported in the news... until now.
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Stephanie Bedo
news.com.au
MH370 investigators have been handed new information from a fisherman who claims to know where the doomed aircraft went down.
Indonesian Rusli Khusmin said his crew witnessed the disaster on March 8, 2014, watching the Malaysia Airlines flight with 239 people on board “move like a broken kite”.
The 42-year-old said there was no noise, just smoke, and he recorded the coordinates of the exact location the plane went into the water.

Mr Khusmin has pinpointed a location in the Sumatran Sea between Malaysia and Indonesia and has sworn on the Koran that he is telling the truth.
“I saw the plane moving from left to right like a broken kite,” he said at a news conference in Subang Jaya, near Kuala Lumpur.
“There was no noise, just black smoke as a result of fires before it crashed into the water.”
He said there was also a strong smell of acidic fumes, but did not explain why it had taken him nearly five years to come forward.
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Rusli Khusmin, 42, a fisherman from Indonesia shows his GPS navigator which he used to record the co-ordinates of where he believes Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 crashed. Picture: Mohd Samsul Mohd Said/Getty ImagesSource:Getty Images
Jacob George, president of CASSA, a Malaysian NGO, said he would now officially send the evidence to the Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.
It’s the latest among several theories on the disappearance of the ill-fated aircraft that remains one of the world’s greatest mysteries.
The most extensive search in aviation history failed to find the plane, with the Malaysian government halting the investigation.
Last month an engineer at a top Danish university claimed investigators had been looking in the wrong place.
He came up with a possible new flight plan that conforms with existing data, and it looks nothing like those that guided search efforts before.
It puts MH370’s probable crash site off Christmas Island, south of Jakarta. And he speculates the missing aircraft’s new possible track means a hijacker could have ‘bailed out’.
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Mr Khusmin couldn’t explain why he took so long to come forward. Picture: Mohd Samsul Mohd Said/Getty ImagesSource:Getty Images
When it comes to finding MH370, there’s never been much to go on.
Shortly after the Boeing 777 took off, its radar transponders and communications systems were all shut down. It meant that, once out of ground-based radar range, nobody could ‘see’ where the aircraft was.
But whoever tried to make the aircraft invisible overlooked one thing: engine monitoring sensors that would automatically report to overhead satellites.
Searchers used these signals, along with inferred flight speeds and courses, to mark-out a broad patch of the Southern Ocean far to the southwest of Perth as the most likely place MH370 went down.
In October there were curious new developments in the French military’s ongoing probe into the date of the flight.
Investigators uncovered a mysterious “third entity” which may be withholding technical data about the path taken.
6a177f5c138de33820841223f72fcf30

CASSA Malaysia president Dr Jacob George shows the co-ordinates and will hand the information to the Prime Minister. Picture: Mohd Samsul Mohd Said/Getty ImagesSource:Getty Images
They also identified a number of “curious passengers” aboard the Boeing 777 who they believe warranted further investigation.
The potentially explosive developments were revealed by Ghyslain Wattrelos, a French national who lost his wife and two teenage children on MH370, following his meeting with judges overseeing the Gendamarie Air Transport (GTA) investigation.
Mr Wattrelos said he was told the French team had found “inconsistencies” in the Malaysian investigation’s official report and identified the presence of “curious” passengers.
They include a Malaysian national and aeronautics specialist seated directly under MH370’s Satcom module who potentially had the technical knowledge to hack the plane’s communication systems and disguise its route.
The GTA, an arm of the French military, is seeking to verify satellite and other technical data used by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) to plot the plane’s journey to a remote part of the southern Indian Ocean off WA.
cf559bc8c8fa311a7a6fbbb29fd94da1

A a modified genuine Boeing 777 flaperon tested in waters near Hobart to help determine where the final resting place of MH370. Picture: AFPSource:AFP
Five pieces, thought to be from the plane, recently washed up in Madagascar.
Aviation expert Victor Iannello believes one fragment, which appears to be from the interior floorboard, is consistent with a “high-speed impact”.
More than 30 bits of aircraft debris have been collected from various places around the world but only three wing fragments that washed up along the Indian Ocean have been confirmed to be from MH370.
Last year a senior aviation figure said it was time the Australian Transport Safety Bureau abandon its version of events.
Captain Mike Keane, a former chief pilot of Britain’s largest airline easyJet, claimed the ATSB was complicit to a crime if it stuck to its “ghost flight” theory that the plane was on autopilot when the pilots were incapacitated at the end of the flight when it crashed.
Experts believe MH370 was used in a murder-suicide mission by Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah.
Captain Keane, who was born in New Zealand and was a fighter pilot and intelligence officer in the Royal Air Force, told The Australianthe ATSB should now publicly admit the captain hijacked his own aircraft, flew it until it crashed and abandoned it outside the bureau’s search area so it could not be found.
 

Hypocrite-The

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MH370 may have crashed near Madagascar, underwater microphones suggest
By Anne Barker
Posted8 hours ago, updated5 hours ago
10767822-3x2-xlarge.jpg
IMAGEData from Cape Leeuwin's hydroacoustic station, HA01, and Diego Garcia's, HA08, indicate a new crash site.(Supplied: Basarsoft/US Department Of State Geographer/Google)
A study of underwater sound waves recorded on the day the Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 disappeared suggests a different route and a possible crash site north-east of Madagascar, if indeed the data is from the missing plane.
Key points:
  • Authorities previously thought the plane crashed south-west of Western Australia
  • Two searches for MH370 have failed to find the wreckage
  • The new data points to a crash site north-east of Madagascar, if the signals are from the missing aircraft
Scientists at Cardiff University in the UK have examined acoustic-gravity waves picked up by two hydroacoustic stations in the Indian Ocean, one off Cape Leeuwin in Western Australia and the other at Diego Garcia further north.
Each of the two stations, operated by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organisation, has three "hydrophones" or underwater microphones, which continuously record sound waves in the ocean.
Signals from both stations show sound waves that could have come from a large object, such as a meteorite or an aircraft hitting the water.








GIFMH370's known flight path, the search area, and where debris has washed up
Previous studies by both Cardiff University and Curtin University in Western Australia have mostly looked at signals from the Cape Leeuwin station between 12:00am and 2:00am UTC on March 8, 2014, which covers the timeframe when authorities believe the plane crashed, based on satellite data from the plane.
But a new understanding of how fast and far acoustic-gravity waves travel under water led the Cardiff scientists to examine signals over a wider timeframe — from 11:00pm on March 7, 2014 to 4:00am the next day — and include data from the more distant hydroacoustic station at Diego Garcia.
"We have now been able to identify two locations where the aeroplane could have impacted with the ocean, as well as an alternative route that the plane may have taken," Cardiff University's Dr Usama Kadri said.
New findings point to Madagascar
An analysis of acoustic waves picked up by the station in Western Australia would suggest a crash site in the southern Indian Ocean that largely includes an area already covered by previous searches for MH370.
But signals from the Diego Garcia station — if indeed they are from the missing aircraft — would indicate a crash site much further north than originally suspected, and mean the missing aircraft must have taken a different route to the one long assumed.
Authorities have long thought the plane crashed somewhere south-west of Western Australia.
The two searches conducted so far have failed to find it.
Dr Kadri said the new findings were based on a better understanding of "sea floor elasticity" or flexibility, which affects how sound waves travel underwater.
MH370: How the tragedy unfolded and why it remains unsolved
The families of those on board may never know what happened to their loved ones.
Read more

"Our research into these waves has moved on since we first proposed the idea in 2017," Dr Kadri wrote in The Conversation.
"Previous analysis considered the sea floor to be rigid, which would not allow the radiating waves to move through it.
"However, if the elasticity of the sea floor is taken into account, then the waves will travel at this enhanced speed.
"When acoustic-gravity waves start travelling through the sea floor their propagation speed boosts to over 3,500 m/s, from the 1,500m/s they would have been travelling at through the water."
Allowing for this sea floor elasticity, the site of impact would be much further away from the hydrophone station than previously thought.
Thus, data from the Diego Garcia would point to a crash site north-east of Madagascar, if the signals are from the missing aircraft.
And it is a big if.
Calls for further analysis
Dr Kadri said the sound signals from this northern hydroacoustic station were distorted by "noise" believed to have been caused by a military exercise, known to have been in place around the time on that side of the Indian Ocean.
He said it is feasible that these large sound waves may instead have come from a rocket or missile being fired, rather than a Boeing 777 crashing into the ocean.
"The bearings of some of these signals fall within the area where signals from the military action were picked up, so it is possible that the signals are associated with the military action," Dr Kadri said.
"But if the signals are related to MH370, this would suggest a new possible impact location in the northern part of the Indian Ocean."
WATCH
Duration: 1 minute 15 seconds1m 15s
VIDEOVictims' families say the MH370 report has no new information
Inexplicably, 25 minutes of data from the Diego Garcia station — where the US has a secretive military base — is missing.
Dr Kadri said the signals his team analysed indicated a 25-minute shutdown that cannot be explained by a technical failure or maintenance, given the three hydrophones operate independently of each other.
He said the CTBTO has failed to give any reason why the data is missing, though either military action or Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 may have caused the system shutdown.
The Madagascar site is also a long way from the so-called "seventh arc" — the imaginary line that maps possible locations of the aircraft based on satellite signals from the plane that were picked up by Britain's Inmarsat satellite.
But given there are so many variables in what is known about the plane — including these satellite "pings" — Dr Kadri believes search authorities including Australia should carry out more detailed analysis of the data from both hydroacoustic stations.
The data behind the MH370 search
The data gathered during the Australian Government-led search for flight MH370 in the southern Indian Ocean.
Read more

"In light of this research we recommended that signals at all times between 23:00 (March 7) and 04:00 (March 8) UTC, at both stations … are analysed with no exception," he said.
"And that this is done independently from other sources [such as satellite data], to minimise the inclusion of uncertainties related to them."
Dr Kadri said he has communicated these recommendations to the Australian Transport Safety Bureau, which oversaw the first search for MH370 in the Indian Ocean, as well as the MH370 Investigation Team in Malaysia and other relevant authorities, in the hope that the search will resume to find the missing aircraft.
The Cardiff research team also plans to carry out a series of field experiments in the field, to see if they can isolate "hidden signals" in the ambient noise to extract more information from the data picked up by the two hydroacoustic stations.
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Hypocrite-The

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Five years on, five theories about MH370's disappearance
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The disappearance of MH370 is one of the most confounding mysteries in aviation history, and in the five years since it vanished, there have been a host of theories about its fate AFP/JK Jagdev
08 Mar 2019 01:39PM (Updated: 08 Mar 2019 01:44PM)
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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 vanished while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on Mar 8, 2014, triggering the biggest hunt in aviation history.
Only a few fragments of the jet have been found, all on western Indian Ocean shores, and search efforts ended last year.

READ: 'I will never give up' - relatives of missing Chinese on MH370 vow to keep searching

The disappearance has spawned a host of theories - some credible, some outlandish. Here are five of them:

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MECHANICAL FAILURE
Much attention has focused on the possibility of a mechanical or structural failure.

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Some experts have put forward the theory that a fire could have broken out in electronic components, which produced smoke that filled the plane and led to the passengers and crew falling unconscious.
The plane then continued on autopilot over the Indian Ocean, where search efforts have been focused, before running out of fuel and crashing, the theory goes.
The idea of a so-called "mass hypoxia event" - "hypoxia" refers to a lack of oxygen - has been supported by a number of analysts.
In a 2014 report setting out details of a search area, the Australian Transport Safety Bureau - which led the main hunt for the jet - said that an "unresponsive crew/ hypoxia event" appeared to fit the final stage of MH370's flight.
ROGUE PILOT
MH370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah has been the subject of intense speculation, and some believe he may have intentionally taken the Boeing-777 off-course and crashed it.
In the months after the plane vanished, the media scrutinised everything from his political beliefs to his mental health for clues as to what could have happened.
Unconfirmed reports said he may have been distraught over marital woes or the controversial conviction of Malaysia's then opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim on sodomy charges just hours before MH370 took off.
But family and friends of Zaharie - a highly respected veteran pilot - strongly reject such claims as baseless.
In 2016, Malaysian officials revealed he had plotted a path over the Indian Ocean on a home flight simulator but stressed this did not prove he deliberately crashed the plane.
TERROR PLOT
There have been a slew of theories - none of them substantiated - that the plane was hijacked as part of a terror plot.
Media mogul Rupert Murdoch has been among those who backed the idea. In a bizarre tweet soon after the plane disappeared, he suggested it was "stolen" and "effectively hidden, perhaps in Northern Pakistan, like Bin Laden".
He was referring to al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, who was killed in a US Navy Seal raid in Pakistan in 2011.
There has also been a suggestion that the plane was commandeered to be used as a "flying bomb" headed for US military installations on the Diego Garcia atoll, and was shot down by the Americans. The United States has dismissed this.
REMOTE TAKEOVER
Some have speculated the plane may have been taken over remotely to foil a hijacking.
According to reports, Boeing was in 2006 awarded a US patent for a system that, once activated, could take control of a commercial aircraft away from the pilot or flight crew in the event of a hijacking.
One of the leading supporters of the idea is Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who told The Australian newspaper last year before he was elected: "The capacity to do that is there. The technology is there."
PUTIN PERHAPS?
One of the wackiest theories appeared in an article in New York magazine by US aviation expert Jeff Wise in 2015.
He suggested MH370 was commandeered and taken to a Russian facility in Kazakhstan, possibly an effort by President Vladimir Putin to intimidate the West amid an escalating crisis in Ukraine, or to gain access to a certain passenger or item in the hold.
"There's no way to know. That's the thing about MH370 theory-making: It's hard to come up with a plausible motive for an act that has no apparent beneficiaries," he wrote.

Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...laysia-airlines-theories-what-happen-11323952
 

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Emotional MH370 families demand answers, five years on




AsiaEmotional MH370 families demand answers, five years on
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Relatives of the passengers on missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 gathered outside the foreign ministry on Friday to demand answers. (Photo: AFP/Greg Baker)
08 Mar 2019 04:30PM(Updated: 08 Mar 2019 04:31PM)
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KUALA LUMPUR: Emotional relatives of those aboard Flight MH370 on Friday (Mar 8) demanded answers to one of the world's greatest aviation mysteries and called for the hunt to resume, five years on from the plane's disappearance.
The Malaysia Airlines jet vanished on Mar 8, 2014 carrying 239 people - mostly from China - en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

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No sign of it was found in a 120,000-square kilometre (46,000-square mile) Indian Ocean search zone and the Australian-led hunt, the largest in aviation history, was suspended in January 2017.
READ: Five years on, five theories about MH370's disappearance
A US exploration firm launched a private hunt last year but it ended after several months of scouring the seabed without success.
Around 50 relatives of Chinese passengers travelled to Beijing from around the country to mark the anniversary and gathered outside the foreign ministry, with some weeping as police officers looked on.

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Hu Qiufang told AFP that family members had spent the past year pleading to see the foreign minister but they were only granted a meeting with a low-level official Friday, who told them there were no updates.
"The Chinese government doesn't listen to us, we feel very helpless," said the 78-year-old, whose son was on the flight.
"As our country, China should be supporting the families."
Jiang Hui, whose mother was on the flight, said he was still haunted by the tragedy: "It's like a living nightmare, the scene replaying in my head."
READ: 'I will never give up': relatives of missing Chinese on MH370 vow to keep searching
Malaysian family members meanwhile called for the search to be restarted.
They were given a glimmer of hope last weekend during a memorial in Kuala Lumpur when the Malaysian transport minister said he was open to hearing proposals to resume the hunt.
"We will continue to do whatever we can to make sure the search goes on," Grace Nathan, whose mother Anne Daisy was on the flight, told AFP.
"As long as there's the possibility of a search, we remain hopeful that the plane can be found."
Jacquita Gonzales, whose husband Patrick Gomes was an MH370 flight steward, said that "every time March comes it's like it was only yesterday that our loved ones went missing - it's very hard."
READ: Five years on, MH370 families band together to seek closure
In a long-awaited final report into the tragedy released in July last year, the official investigation team pointed to failings by air traffic control and said the course of the plane was changed manually.
But they failed to come up with any firm conclusions, leaving relatives angry and disappointed.
Source: AFP/ec
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