Malaysia says jet's disappearance 'deliberate'

Malaysian PM says could not confirm rising suspicions that plane had been forcibly taken over.


Afp March 15, 2014
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak (C) addresses reporters about the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, as Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein (L) and Department of Civil Aviation's Director General Azharuddin Abdul Rahman (R) stand by him, at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport. PHOTO: REUTERS

KUALA LUMPUR: A missing Malaysian airliner was apparently deliberately diverted and flown for hours after vanishing from radar, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said Saturday, in an announcement that stopped short of confirming a hijack but took the "excruciating" jet drama into uncharted new territory.

Razak said investigators believed "with a high degree of certainty" that Malaysia Airlines flight 370's communications systems were manually switched off, and that the plane veered westward in a fashion "consistent with deliberate action" after dropping off primary radar.

But he told a highly anticipated press conference watched around the world that he could not confirm rising suspicions that the plane had been forcibly taken over.

"Despite media reports that the plane was hijacked, I wish to be very clear: we are still investigating all possibilities as to what caused MH370 to deviate from its original flight path," he said.

The investigation data appeared to cast aside a host of theories attempting to explain the plane's disappearance, which has transfixed the world and left the families of the 239 passengers and crew distraught, enraged and baying for information that authorities have not been able to provide.

These include the notion of a sudden mid-air explosion or a catastrophic equipment or structural failure, or a crash into the South China Sea.

At the same time, it opened a whole new avenue of possible speculation, including an attempted 9/11-style attack, enhancing the twist-and-turn mystery surrounding one of the biggest enigmas in modern aviation history.

Final satellite communication with the Boeing 777 flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing came more than six-and-a-half hours after it vanished from civilian radar at 1:30am on March 8, Razak said.

He said investigators had concluded the plane was indeed diverted to the west from its original flight path, and as a result search operations in the South China Sea were being called off.

But the remaining area remained dauntingly large. Razak said the plane could be anywhere from "Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan to northern Thailand, or a southern corridor stretching approximately from Indonesia to the southern Indian Ocean".

Earlier, a senior Malaysian military official had told AFP that investigators now believe the plane was commandeered by a "skilled, competent and current pilot," but stopped short of specifying whether a hijacker or member of the crew was suspected.

"He knew how to avoid the civilian radar. He appears to have studied how to avoid it," the official said.

As the search for the plane continues, the focus in the gripping saga will shift to who would have diverted the plane and why.

Malaysian security officials were already embarrassed by revelations earlier in the week that two Iranian men had managed to board the plane using stolen European passports.

It could also bring new attention on Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, and his First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27.

An Australian television report broadcast an interview with a young South African woman who alleged Fariq and another pilot colleague invited them into the cockpit of a flight he co-piloted in 2011 - a breach of post-9/11 security rules.

Gerry Soejatman, a Jakarta-based independent aviation analyst told AFP following Razak's remarks that the new information makes a possible motive "extremely difficult to understand."

"If that was deliberate, we may be dealing with something beyond the mission planning for 9/11," he said.

As unconfirmed reports had mounted suggesting the plane banked west and flew for hours, analysts have speculated on a sudden loss of cabin pressure or other mechanical event that incapacitated the pilots, catastrophic pilot error, a hijack, action by a rogue member of the flight crew, or pilot suicide.

The reports of a westward bank had coincided with an accelerating shift of search and rescue resources towards the Indian Ocean.

A US destroyer and surveillance plane joined expanded search operations Saturday in the Bay of Bengal.

Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven Warren said the USS Kidd guided missile destroyer and a P-8 Poseidon aircraft had been deployed to the "western search area" in the Andaman Sea and Bay of Bengal.

The Boeing 777 vanished over waters between Malaysia and southern Vietnam. The night was clear and no distress signal was received.

Dozens of ships and aircraft from 14 countries have been deployed across the entire search zone since MH370 went missing.

For distraught relatives of the passengers and crew, the long drawn-out search has been torture.

"Right now, anything is possible," said a middle-aged Chinese woman in Beijing who had a relative on the flight and complained of a lack of information.

"We keep hoping there will be some good news, but it's not going well."

Even with attention now firmly on the Indian Ocean, the search parameters pose enormous logistical challenges.

The vast Indian Ocean has an average depth of nearly 3,900 metres and any debris would have been widely dispersed by currents after a week.

"Wind and sea conditions are definitely going to play a very big part if there is wreckage, and if it happens to be in the Indian Ocean. It is an immense area," said Greg Waldron, Asia managing editor for aviation industry magazine FlightGlobal.

The plane has one of the best safety records of any jet, and the airline also has a solid record.

COMMENTS (9)

the Skunk | 10 years ago | Reply The sooner this case is demystified and cleared up, the better for the 239 families and all of us. Maybe, the TTP and its cohorts can provide an inkling. Salams
Tani | 10 years ago | Reply

@muzzafar.. All radars switches inside plane where shut down. Not together but between gap of 14 mins. So it was deliberate. Coz they shut down plane can't be tracked. Their plan was either suicide mission or landing on Island or 9/11style. I don't think it's still afloat and held hostage on island. If it was, they would have contacted and demanded something no such thing so far.The plane was heading towards isolated islands of north Thailand or india's admaman Nicobar Islands if they wanted to stay alive. Maybe they ran out of fuel on way and crashed into deep waters of Indian Ocean or something went wrong while flying hijacked plane, boing has history of electricity failure. Suicide theory doesn't make sense why he would change flight path if his ultimate aim was to anyway commit suicide. Looks like planes deep under water in Indian Ocean and if it is, it's very difficult to track. Only black box sending signal from cockpit can help. But it only sends signal till 30 meter something radius for 30days then battery goes dead.

VIEW MORE COMMENTS
Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ