Chinese MH370 relatives file suit in Beijing
The flight, with 239 people on board, vanished en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014
BEIJING:
Relatives of a dozen Chinese passengers aboard missing flight MH370 began filing suits against Malaysia Airlines at a Beijing court Monday, a day ahead of the second anniversary of its disappearance and a legal deadline to do so.
Packed into a small office at the Beijing Rail Transportation Court, which has been designated to handle MH370 cases, they held manilla folders with litigation papers in their hands.
Several wiped away tears, turning to borrow tissues from neighbours, before depositing their documents with court officials.Families of missing MH370 passengers sue airline as deadline nears
The flight, with 239 people -- including 153 Chinese citizens -- on board, vanished en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, and authorities said it went down in the southern Indian Ocean.
Under international agreements, families have two years to sue over air accidents.
But many Chinese families were "deeply conflicted" over the decision to go to court, said lawyer Zhang Qihuai, whose Lanpeng firm represents the group who were filing suit on Monday.
Even while suing for the wrongful deaths of their loved ones, many Chinese next of kin consistently express beliefs that the passengers are still alive, perhaps being held at an unknown location, despite a piece of the plane washing up on the French Indian Ocean island of Reunion and other potential debris being found in Mozambique.
MH370 families issue emotional plea for open-ended search
"They think that after you've accepted compensation, the company can deny any further responsibility and wash its hands of the incident, and that the public will naturally forget about the whole thing," explained Zhang.
The compensation requested ranged from around five to eight million yuan ($755,000 to $1.23 million) per victim, he said, depending on their age and earnings.
"Originally, many didn't intend to sue, and instead wanted to continue waiting. But there's a time limit, so they have no other choice -- losing the right to sue would be terribly painful."
Several US, Malaysian, Australian and Chinese law firms have told AFP that they have begun filing suit on behalf of relatives, seeking undisclosed damages.
A vast Australian-search of 120,000 square kilometres (46,000 square miles) of the southern Indian Ocean seabed has so far failed to locate the wreckage, and authorities plan to end the operation -- projected to cost up to $130 million -- if no new leads emerge by the time it is completed, expected in July.
The relatives hope that court scrutiny will help reveal answers about what befell the plane.
At the same time, many express misgivings over negotiating compensation while the investigation remains inconclusive, referring to payouts as "blood money, received in exchange for life".
"I chose to prosecute in order to have my child safely returned to me," said Gao Xianying, 65, who lost her daughter, son-in-law, and three-year-old granddaughter on the flight.
"I'm convinced that the plane didn't crash into the Indian Ocean, that it landed somewhere and that my child is safe, living on this earth."
She would never believe her family's death until their bodies were found, she said.
"You can scream your excuses until the heavens and the earth come down, for a thousand years or ten thousand, but without concrete evidence I won't believe it or accept it. I want the truth! Where is the plane? Where are the passengers?" she asked.
Australia search team still ‘hopeful’ as MH370 hunt nears end
Zhang said his clients' desire for answers to the question of the plane's fate put them under enormous pressure.
For Gao, the deadline was "unjust and unfair, causing us a lot of mental harm", and ought not to apply to a case as inconclusive as MH370.
"The date March 8 is like a knife that has stabbed us once again," she said, wiping away tears.
Relatives of a dozen Chinese passengers aboard missing flight MH370 began filing suits against Malaysia Airlines at a Beijing court Monday, a day ahead of the second anniversary of its disappearance and a legal deadline to do so.
Packed into a small office at the Beijing Rail Transportation Court, which has been designated to handle MH370 cases, they held manilla folders with litigation papers in their hands.
Several wiped away tears, turning to borrow tissues from neighbours, before depositing their documents with court officials.Families of missing MH370 passengers sue airline as deadline nears
The flight, with 239 people -- including 153 Chinese citizens -- on board, vanished en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, and authorities said it went down in the southern Indian Ocean.
Under international agreements, families have two years to sue over air accidents.
But many Chinese families were "deeply conflicted" over the decision to go to court, said lawyer Zhang Qihuai, whose Lanpeng firm represents the group who were filing suit on Monday.
Even while suing for the wrongful deaths of their loved ones, many Chinese next of kin consistently express beliefs that the passengers are still alive, perhaps being held at an unknown location, despite a piece of the plane washing up on the French Indian Ocean island of Reunion and other potential debris being found in Mozambique.
MH370 families issue emotional plea for open-ended search
"They think that after you've accepted compensation, the company can deny any further responsibility and wash its hands of the incident, and that the public will naturally forget about the whole thing," explained Zhang.
The compensation requested ranged from around five to eight million yuan ($755,000 to $1.23 million) per victim, he said, depending on their age and earnings.
"Originally, many didn't intend to sue, and instead wanted to continue waiting. But there's a time limit, so they have no other choice -- losing the right to sue would be terribly painful."
Several US, Malaysian, Australian and Chinese law firms have told AFP that they have begun filing suit on behalf of relatives, seeking undisclosed damages.
A vast Australian-search of 120,000 square kilometres (46,000 square miles) of the southern Indian Ocean seabed has so far failed to locate the wreckage, and authorities plan to end the operation -- projected to cost up to $130 million -- if no new leads emerge by the time it is completed, expected in July.
The relatives hope that court scrutiny will help reveal answers about what befell the plane.
At the same time, many express misgivings over negotiating compensation while the investigation remains inconclusive, referring to payouts as "blood money, received in exchange for life".
"I chose to prosecute in order to have my child safely returned to me," said Gao Xianying, 65, who lost her daughter, son-in-law, and three-year-old granddaughter on the flight.
"I'm convinced that the plane didn't crash into the Indian Ocean, that it landed somewhere and that my child is safe, living on this earth."
She would never believe her family's death until their bodies were found, she said.
"You can scream your excuses until the heavens and the earth come down, for a thousand years or ten thousand, but without concrete evidence I won't believe it or accept it. I want the truth! Where is the plane? Where are the passengers?" she asked.
Australia search team still ‘hopeful’ as MH370 hunt nears end
Zhang said his clients' desire for answers to the question of the plane's fate put them under enormous pressure.
For Gao, the deadline was "unjust and unfair, causing us a lot of mental harm", and ought not to apply to a case as inconclusive as MH370.
"The date March 8 is like a knife that has stabbed us once again," she said, wiping away tears.