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MALAYSIAN Airlines flight en route to China is missing.

Re: MAS planes so spooky!

only MAS planes cannot be found in any accidents.

others you can find the wreckages.

what they do to their planes? Mats bomohs put kong tao is it?

The disappearance is payback for Najib trying to imprison Anwar again.
 
Yup due to him being a druggie and alcoholic,,it help calm his nerves and he flew the plane better,,,who says drugs and alcohol is bad?

Remember this movie? If they have Denzel Washington, the plane would be saved.

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<embed height="315" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="560" src="//www.youtube.com/v/ugsQQKn0muQ?version=3&hl=en_US" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></object>
 
True. Attention that terrorists crave for can come in 2 ways. Claiming responsibility is one. The other way is complete silence to keep the mystery alive.

The latter makes no sense. How do they further their cause by remaining silent and what benefit do they gain?
Nothing feeds a terrorist's or hijacker's agenda more than the oxygen of publicity.
 
Remember this movie? If they have Denzel Washington, the plane would be saved.

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I prefer Executive Decision.
 
Hello bro.

This nigger's name is Mario Balotelli and he is Italian. Is that normal? Using my brain, bro.

GEGHVwx.jpg

You quite zhun leh. :D
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/mas-aircraft-goes-missing--says-airline-023820132.html
 
Re: Mh370

For me, I won't feel well to strike lottery on this kind of situation and mishap. For chinese with traditional values and virtues, it is called chek ark. Chek Ark.
 

Warning of ‘possible terrorist attack on China’ received by Taiwan days before Malaysia Airlines jet vanished

National Security Bureau chief Tsai De-sheng says the agency passed on a warning of planned attacks on Beijing airport and the city’s subway system to Chinese authorities

PUBLISHED : Monday, 10 March, 2014, 4:49pm
UPDATED : Monday, 10 March, 2014, 8:30pm

Bryan Harris [email protected]

beijingairport_tsaide-sheng.jpg


A warning of a possible terrorist attack on China was received by Taiwan last week. Photo: AP

Taiwan’s spy chief revealed on Monday that the island’s security officials had last week received a warning of possible terrorist attacks in China.

National Security Bureau chief Tsai De-sheng told a legislative committee on Monday that the agency had passed on a warning of planned attacks on Beijing airport and the city’s subway system to Chinese authorities, after receiving it on March 4.

Tsai did not specify how the warning, which came three days after a knife attack at Kunming railway station left 29 civilians dead, had been relayed to the bureau.

However, security chiefs were believed to have received the alert from China Airlines, following a phone call to the company earlier in the day from a man who said he wanted to warn of possible terrorist activity.

Claiming to work for an anti-terrorism organisation in France, the caller at first spoke in French, but switched to Putonghua with a Cantonese accent after the airline’s switchboard operator could not understand him.

China Airlines on Monday confirmed that a call was received on March 4 and said information received had been passed to Taiwan’s Civil Aviation Authority and Aviation Police.

A statement by the airline said: “China Airlines on March 4 received calls claiming to provide intelligence on terror organisations, referring to mainland China, [saying] Beijing airport will have terrorist attacks.”

There is no indication that the warning was connected to the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, which vanished from radar in the early hours of Saturday, March 8.

Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou on Monday instructed the defence ministry and coastguard aircraft and vessels to join the search for the plane which went missing along with 227 passengers and 12 crew members off the coast of Vietnam.

Separately, on March 3 China Airlines circulated an unrelated ‘Aviation Security Notice’ to all staff, warning of a “significant risk of terrorist attacks and military actions against aviation”, a spokeswoman confirmed today.

The spokeswoman said the notice was issued in the wake of the March 1 Kunming railway station attacks in which 29 civilians were hacked to death by rampaging knifemen.

It urged all staff to “carry out your security responsibilities accordingly”, adding that: “All staff in mainland China please be aware of individual security.”

The spokesman said that although security alerts were circulated from time to time, they are not automatically issued during high-profile events such as the ongoing National People’s Congress meetings in Beijing.

As a search for the plane continued on Monday, a high-ranking Malaysian official said hijacking could not be ruled out as a possible explanation for the disappearance.

Director-general of Malaysia’s Department of Civil Aviation, Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, said all possibilities were being investigated, but added that despite reports that debris had been spotted by a Vietnamese search crew, the country’s authorities had not been able to confirm any positive sighting.

Despite the so far fruitless search over the South China Sea, a Chinese coast guard ship has detected “two large swathes of oil slick” possibly related to the aircraft, Chinese state broadcaster CCTV said on Monday afternoon.

The China Coast Guard 3411, which was scouring waters between Malaysia and Vietnam along with dozens of other planes and vessels from at least eight other nations, has taken samples of the oil slick for examination, CCTV reported.

Last night Interpol announced that Malaysia’s international air security standards were being probed, after it said two stolen passports used by passengers on board the flight were in its database and could have been checked by officials in Kuala Lumpur.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said the country’s airport security protocols were being reviewed.

The two men who boarded the plane with passports stolen from Italian Luigi Maraldi and Austrian Christian Kozel were booked to fly from Kuala Lumpur to Amsterdam via Beijing before flying to Copenhagen and Frankfurt separately.

Both flights had been booked with China Southern Airlines, which operates some flights jointly with other companies including Malaysia Airlines, and their ticket numbers were consecutive.

It appeared the tickets were purchased at the same time in Thai baht at identical prices, according to China’s official e-ticket verification system Travelsky.

Additional reporting by Lawrence Chung in Taipei

 

Warning of ‘possible terrorist attack on China’ received by Taiwan days before Malaysia Airlines jet vanished

National Security Bureau chief Tsai De-sheng says the agency passed on a warning of planned attacks on Beijing airport and the city’s subway system to Chinese authorities

PUBLISHED : Monday, 10 March, 2014, 4:49pm
UPDATED : Monday, 10 March, 2014, 8:30pm

Bryan Harris [email protected]

beijingairport_tsaide-sheng.jpg


A warning of a possible terrorist attack on China was received by Taiwan last week. Photo: AP

Taiwan’s spy chief revealed on Monday that the island’s security officials had last week received a warning of possible terrorist attacks in China.

National Security Bureau chief Tsai De-sheng told a legislative committee on Monday that the agency had passed on a warning of planned attacks on Beijing airport and the city’s subway system to Chinese authorities, after receiving it on March 4.

Tsai did not specify how the warning, which came three days after a knife attack at Kunming railway station left 29 civilians dead, had been relayed to the bureau.

However, security chiefs were believed to have received the alert from China Airlines, following a phone call to the company earlier in the day from a man who said he wanted to warn of possible terrorist activity.

Claiming to work for an anti-terrorism organisation in France, the caller at first spoke in French, but switched to Putonghua with a Cantonese accent after the airline’s switchboard operator could not understand him.

China Airlines on Monday confirmed that a call was received on March 4 and said information received had been passed to Taiwan’s Civil Aviation Authority and Aviation Police.

A statement by the airline said: “China Airlines on March 4 received calls claiming to provide intelligence on terror organisations, referring to mainland China, [saying] Beijing airport will have terrorist attacks.”

There is no indication that the warning was connected to the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, which vanished from radar in the early hours of Saturday, March 8.

Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou on Monday instructed the defence ministry and coastguard aircraft and vessels to join the search for the plane which went missing along with 227 passengers and 12 crew members off the coast of Vietnam.

Separately, on March 3 China Airlines circulated an unrelated ‘Aviation Security Notice’ to all staff, warning of a “significant risk of terrorist attacks and military actions against aviation”, a spokeswoman confirmed today.

The spokeswoman said the notice was issued in the wake of the March 1 Kunming railway station attacks in which 29 civilians were hacked to death by rampaging knifemen.

It urged all staff to “carry out your security responsibilities accordingly”, adding that: “All staff in mainland China please be aware of individual security.”

The spokesman said that although security alerts were circulated from time to time, they are not automatically issued during high-profile events such as the ongoing National People’s Congress meetings in Beijing.

As a search for the plane continued on Monday, a high-ranking Malaysian official said hijacking could not be ruled out as a possible explanation for the disappearance.

Director-general of Malaysia’s Department of Civil Aviation, Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, said all possibilities were being investigated, but added that despite reports that debris had been spotted by a Vietnamese search crew, the country’s authorities had not been able to confirm any positive sighting.

Despite the so far fruitless search over the South China Sea, a Chinese coast guard ship has detected “two large swathes of oil slick” possibly related to the aircraft, Chinese state broadcaster CCTV said on Monday afternoon.

The China Coast Guard 3411, which was scouring waters between Malaysia and Vietnam along with dozens of other planes and vessels from at least eight other nations, has taken samples of the oil slick for examination, CCTV reported.

Last night Interpol announced that Malaysia’s international air security standards were being probed, after it said two stolen passports used by passengers on board the flight were in its database and could have been checked by officials in Kuala Lumpur.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said the country’s airport security protocols were being reviewed.

The two men who boarded the plane with passports stolen from Italian Luigi Maraldi and Austrian Christian Kozel were booked to fly from Kuala Lumpur to Amsterdam via Beijing before flying to Copenhagen and Frankfurt separately.

Both flights had been booked with China Southern Airlines, which operates some flights jointly with other companies including Malaysia Airlines, and their ticket numbers were consecutive.

It appeared the tickets were purchased at the same time in Thai baht at identical prices, according to China’s official e-ticket verification system Travelsky.

Additional reporting by Lawrence Chung in Taipei


China will not listen to its enemy.
 
the caller probably thought that China airlines is PRC China airline. he contacted ROC Taiwan instead.
 
Najib's government gets desperate. Enter the bomoh.
============================

SEPANG: A shaman, claiming to be able to locate the missing MH370 jetliner, offered his expertise to help the authorities in their search.

Datuk Mahaguru Ibrahim Mat Zin, known as Raja Bomoh Sedunia Nujum VIP and 1Malaysia Corporate Bomoh said he suspects the missing aircraft was hijacked by elves (buniyan)

"According to my vision,a large black figure believed to be an eagle was seen flying over the plane after which the plane plunged.

" I have been using my bubu (traditional fishing tool) and bamboo scopes to see the situation there, and I saw that the aircraft is currently suspended in mid air," he said.

Ibrahim who claimed to have solved cases like the highland towers, mystery of villa Nabila, Mona Fandy and others, attracted a large crowd during his 'seeing' demonstration at the international arrival hall in Kuala Lumpur International Airport.

Read more: MISSING MH370: Raja Bomoh arrives to help find missing plane - Latest - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/latest/font-c...elp-find-missing-plane-1.506402#ixzz2vZRUle5s
 
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That said, RSIS is the more neutral of the pro-PAP TTs. Beyond that "terrorist expert", it does produce pretty good reports.

Any idea what happened to Bilveer and Hussien Mutalib? These 2 used to be interviewed regularly before Rohan's arrival.
 
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