MH370 pilot's sister hits back at 'rubbish' speculation

Pilot's sisters says she wants world to know he was a loving man who would stop at nothing to render help when needed


Afp March 07, 2015
PHOTO: REUTERS

KUALA LUMPUR: The sister of MH370's pilot has launched a staunch defense of her brother against suggestions that he played a role in the flight's disappearance, as speculation over the mystery has intensified ahead of its first anniversary.

In a statement released online, Sakinab Shah said 53-year-old captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah was a "man of integrity" and that he had been acting normally when they last met about two weeks before the Malaysia Airlines plane went missing on 8 March last year.

Read: Lessons learnt as MH370 hunt marks one year

Speculation had emerged shortly after the plane disappeared that Zaharie had suffered some personal problems, and more recent reports have suggested that pilot action remains among the most plausible explanations for the mystery.

But Sakinab rejected that as "all junk, all rubbish".

"As things stand today, with no tangible evidence to show, NO ONE, be you politician, scientist, aviation expert, plane crash investigator, pilot, retired pilot, media or whoever else... NONE OF YOU have a right to blame Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah for any wrongdoing," the posting which surfaced this week said.

Read: Malaysia declares MH370 an accident, passengers presumed dead

"I want the world to know here is a loving man who will stop at nothing to render help when it is needed."

Peter Chong, a close friend of Zaharie and his family, confirmed to AFP the posting was genuine.

The plane, carrying 239 passengers and crew, swerved off of its route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing for reasons unknown. No trace has been found despite an ongoing search in the southern Indian Ocean where experts believe it eventually crashed.

Read: Malaysia still top choice for Muslim travellers: report

Early speculation focused on Zaharie and co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid after Malaysia said shortly after the disappearance that the plane's tracking systems appeared to have been manually turned off and the Boeing 777 deliberately diverted.

Malaysian authorities investigated the cockpit crew's backgrounds and examined a flight simulator that Zaharie had used at home, but have said nothing suspicious ever turned up.

It isn't the first time that relatives have sought to defend the reputation of Zaharie, a 33-year veteran with Malaysia Airlines who was highly regarded by his peers.

Read: Ten months on, Australia confident of finding MH370

While his family has avoided the media glare, both his son and daughter last year separately defended him in public statements.

In her posting, his sister described him as an easy-going, compassionate and generous man.

"He certainly didn't have the right foundation to be able to figure out a scheme to hijack his own plane and then to disappear into thin air without leaving a trace," she said.

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