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Beijing bound Air Malaysia flight loses contact

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negative
the sat pics showing big floating objects are still pending for verification
I dont know where did you get your report. Source?

Missing Malaysia Airlines flight: No wreckage found in suspected crash area

Vietnamese aircraft have failed to find any wreckage from the missing Malaysian Airlines plane after large objects were pictured floating in the South China Sea.

A picture captured by a Chinese satellite appeared to show the silvery outline of plane wreckage in the ocean.

It was taken at 11am on Sunday - the day after the Boeing 777 disappeared - and released by Beijing officials yesterday., who flew aboard a Antonov 26 cargo plane for three hours.

Vietnamese Aircraft repeatedly circled the area shown by the image - but were unable to detect anything, said a journalist on board one of the planes.

Earlier China's president said his country will not stop searching for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane as long as there is a "glimmer of hope."

Li Keqiang called for the "relevant party" to step up coordination.

"This is an international and large-scale search operation involving many countries," President Li said in remarks to reporters.

"The Chinese government has asked the relevant party to enhance coordination, investigate the cause, locate the missing plane as quickly as possible and properly handle all related matters."

The so-far fruitless search for the plane entered its sixth day on Thursday and China has dispatched multiple aircraft, ships and satellite in the multinational search mission.

Chinese authorities said there is no proof that objects pictured in a satellite image floating in the South China sea are debris from the missing Malaysia Airways jet.

China’s civil aviation chief Li Jiaxiang said however, that Chinese satellites "have found smoke and floating objects" but that "at present we cannot confirm this is related to the missing aircraft."

The grainy picture captured by the Chinese satellite shows three large objects - one the length of a bus - floating to the north east of where the missing plane took off in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Saturday.

The find would back claims made by a New Zealand oil rig worker who says he saw a plane on fire over the South China Sea south of Vietnam.

If the wreckage is confirmed, it would mean the crash site was near the last confirmed radar sighting of the plane.

This would discount the theory that the plane may have turned back towards Malaysia and flown off course for another 200 miles to the Strait of Malacca between Malaysia and Indonesia.

US transport expert Peter Goelz said he had always been sceptical about reports the plane had turned back.

He said: “It’s where it’s supposed to be. I think they’ve got to get vessels and aircraft there as quickly as humanly possible.”

Missing Malaysia Airlines flight: No wreckage found in suspected crash area - Mirror Online

Here is another source

No debris of missing Malaysia Airlines plane at satellite image area - One News | TVNZ

Missing Malaysia Airlines Flight live : Chinese satellite finds 'suspected crash area' of missing Malaysia Airlines flight - Mirror Online


 
Indian Navy & Indian Coast Guard join search effort 'OPERATION SEARCHLIGHT' for Flight MH370. Assets deployed:

- 1 Boeing P-8I ex Arakkonam
- 1 Indian Navy Do-228 ex Port Blair
- 1 Indian Coast Guard Do-228 ex Port Blair
- Amphibious ship INS Kumbhir ex Campbell Bay
- OPV INS Saryu ex Port Blair
- FPV ICGS Kanak Lata Barua ex Port Blair
 
Malaysia rejects China’s lost plane images, denies reports MH370 flew on for hours

Malaysia on Thursday denied a media report that its missing airliner flew on for hours after last making contact, and said Chinese photos that raised hopes of a search breakthrough actually showed no wreckage.

“Those reports are inaccurate,” Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said of a Wall Street Journal report that said US investigators suspected the plane had flown on.

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The report said data automatically sent to the ground from the aircraft’s Rolls-Royce engines suggested the Boeing 777 was in the air for four hours after its last contact with air traffic control at 1.30am Malaysian time.

“The last transmission from the aircraft was at 0107 hours which indicated that everything was normal,” Hishammuddin said.

The Malaysia Airlines (MAS) jet was en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on an overnight flight when it disappeared.

“Rolls-Royce and Boeing teams are here in Kuala Lumpur and have worked with MAS and investigation teams since Sunday. These issues have never been raised.”

Rolls-Royce and Boeing teams are here in Kuala Lumpur and have worked with MAS and investigation teams since Sunday. These issues have never been raised
Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein
He also said China had told Malaysia that satellite photos released on the website of a Chinese state oceanic agency, apparently showing three large objects in a suspected crash site, were released “by mistake and did not show any debris.”

A huge search effort has failed to find any evidence of the plane’s fate despite scouring land and sea for six days.

It has been repeatedly dogged by false leads and conflicting information, drawing mounting accusations that Malaysia is bungling the response.

The effort involves dozens of vessels and aircraft from countries around Asia, plus the United States.

The Chinese agency’s images had prompted Malaysia and Vietnam to dispatch planes to the area in question in the South China Sea to hunt for the suspect objects.

“The publication of the images on the website is an accident,” Hishammuddin said, relating a statement he said he had received from China’s ambassador to Malaysia.

He said the Chinese government did not endorse the action and was investigating.


Malaysia rejects China’s lost plane images, denies reports MH370 flew on for hours | South China Morning Post
 
hijacking and landing on a secret location as suspected

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13-Mar-2014

US investigators think that Malaysian Airlines flight 370 remained airborne for four more hours after vanishing from its last recorded position - raising the startling prospect the plane could have been hijacked.

Officials suspect that the plane flew for a total of five hours based on data automatically downloaded from the Boeing 777's Rolls Royce engines and sent back to the ground as part of a routine monitoring program.

US counter-terrorism teams are now pursuing the astonishing possibility that the plane and its 239 passengers were diverted to an undisclosed location 'with the intention of using it later for another purpose'.

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Hijacked and hidden? US counter-terror officials fear plane could have been captured after debris spotted by Chinese is ruled out and new data reveals it was airborne FOUR hours after vanishing | Mail Online
What is the point of hijacking a plane and hiding it? if you do not make any demands what is your end game?
 
Guys this is a very serious thread, can we keep extreme humor out of this one pls, for example shuttler calling other people troll!!!
 
Vietnam allows all foreign navies to travel through and even operate in our controlled waters.
What do you mean with the bold part?
I said all China ships still searching in Malaysia side, last China satellite's image about three floating objects also in Malaysia side not close to Vietnam territorial waters. @BoQ77 need read news again.

China didn't show any strange thing in Vietnam waters, it's still in Malaysia side.
Hope Chinese guys don't release something strange to our sea while searching for the missing airplane
 
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Missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370: Officials reject US claims jet 'could have 'flown for four hours' after last-known contact - Asia - World - The Independent

Six days after it disappeared without trace, more confusion – not less – engulfs the fate of missing Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 and her 239 passengers and crew.

At a press conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia’s Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said a search involving 12 nations and more than 80 aircraft and planes had still failed to uncover any trace of the Boeing 777. “There is no real precedent for a situation like this. The plane vanished,” he said.

Mr Hussein strongly denied reports that data from the plane’s engines showed that it had flown for a further four hours from its last confirmed location and may have been intentionally diverted.

Earlier, the Wall Street Journal reported that investigators in the US were examining whether the missing plane was “intentionally diverted” from its planned route.

The report said US counter-terrorism officials were examining the possibility that the plane’s course had been changed “with the intention of using it later for another purpose” and that its transponders were intentionally turned off to avoid radar detection.

It said said data downloaded automatically from the plane’s engines, suggested the plane flew for a total of five hours. Its final confirmed location was at 1.31am last Saturday, about 40 minutes after it took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport. At that point it was heading north-east across the mouth of the Gulf of Thailand on what should have been a six-hour flight to Beijing.

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If true, the information downloaded from the plane’s Rolls Royce engines as part of a routine maintenance and monitoring programme, suggested the plane could have flown on for up to 2,000 more miles and reached as far as northern India or even the north-west coast of Australia. It would expand the possible search area almost limitlessly.

But during a press conference on Thursday afternoon local time, Mr Hussein rejected the reports. He said experts from both Boeing and Rolls Royce were assisting the investigation and that the last transmission received from the engines was at 1.07am on Saturday morning. It had suggested everything was normal.

“Rolls Royce and Boeing teams are here in Kuala Lumpur and have worked with Malaysia Airlines investigation teams since Sunday,” he said. “This issue has never been raised. Since today’s media reports Malaysia Airlines has asked Rolls Royce and Boeing specifically about the data. As far as Rolls Royce and Boeing are concerned those reports are inaccurate.”

He added: “Whenever there any any details they must be corroborated.”

Mr Hussein also denied reports in the Malaysian media which claimed the police had raided the home of the plane’s main pilot, Zaharie Ahmad Shah, to determine whether or not he was encountering any psychological problems.

Neither Rolls Royce or Boeing have yet publicly commented on the report. Bill O’Sullivan, a communications manager with Rolls Royce, told The Independent on Thursday morning that any statement would be sent out by email if the company had one to make.

The report in the Wall Street Journal said the data has led investigators in the US to pursue the prospect that the plane may have been diverted by a pilot or someone else. It is unclear whether the plane reached an alternate destination or if it crashed, potentially hundreds of miles from where an international search effort has been focused.

Six days after the plane went missing, most reports had suggested that terrorism or hijacking had been largely discounted. But the report said the new data raised a “host of new questions and possibilities about what happened” to the plane and those aboard.

The report said US investigators remained “fluid” as to the causes of the plane’s disappearance and that it remained unclear whether investigators had evidence indicating possible terrorism or espionage.

The flurry of claims and denials came as an effort to locate the plane spread out over more than 27,000 nautical square miles. Search planes had been dispatched to a site believed to be the location of where a Chinese government agency website said a satellite had photographed three “suspicious floating objects” on Sunday. It is unclear why it took China so long to share the information.

The location was close to where the plane lost contact with air traffic control but by early Thursday afternoon local time, nothing had been found at the spot. The Associated Press said the head of Malaysia’s civil aviation authority, Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, had confirmed no debris had been located by the Vietnamese and Malaysian plans dispatched there.

“We are in the middle of a multinational search involving many countries and more than 80 ships and aircraft. This is a crisis situation. It is a very complex operation and it has not always been easy,” said Mr Hussein, the transport minister.

Earlier on Thursday, China continued to put pressure on Malaysia. Of the 239 people on board, more than 150 were from China. China has criticised Malaysia for the slow pace of the operation and what it has called conflicting information about the search.

Speaking in Beijing, Premier Li Keqiang, called for the “relevant party” step up coordination while China’s civil aviation chief. “We will not give up on any suspected clue that has been found,” he said. “This is an international and large-scale search operation involving many countries.”

The last definitive sighting on civilian radar screens of MH370 came at 1.31am on Saturday, less than an hour after the plane took. On Wednesday Rodzali Daud, the Malaysian air force chief, said a dot was plotted on military radar at 2.15 a.m., 200 miles north-west of Penang Island off Malaysia’s west coast at the northern tip of the Strait of Malacca.

But he stressed that there was no confirmation that the dot on the radar was Flight MH370. He said Malaysia was sharing the data with the US Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Security Board.

Malaysia Airlines has said that as a mark of respect to the passengers and crew on board MH370, the MH370 and MH371 flight codes are to be will be retired from Kuala Lumpur- Beijing-Kuala Lumpur route.
 
1. Even if it did, how come no radars from any country picked up aircraft?
2. If it landed in DG, wouldn't the US let the world know?
 
Interesting! I am amused how military radars of any country did not pick up any signal. :confused:
The Malaysia radar had detected a friendly aircraft fly to the West, that they told international media. Of course they not tell whether MH370 or others, just say no harm at last lost it in West of Malaysia (Malacca sea)

The rumor said pilot hijacked MH370. Closed MH370's signal devices then fly back to Kuala Lumpur, they ask talks with Malaysia government with all passengers as hostages, but Malaysia refused then MH370 plan to hit twin towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Airforce shot MH370 down in Malacca.
 
1. Even if it did, how come no radars from any country picked up aircraft?
2. If it landed in DG, wouldn't the US let the world know?

1.Fly in India Ocean, there's no land country no radar stations. Except MH370 fly west pass through West Malaysia, Malaysia Airforce had confirmed there's a some friendly aircraft fly west, but they still not tell what it is.

2. Send China satellites to scan DG !
 
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