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Malaysian airlines mystery


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worth a read and might just fit the puzzle... NEW DAILY MAIL ARTICLE Police are investigating the possibility that the pilot of missing Flight MH370 hijacked his own aircraft in a bizarre political protest. The Mail on Sunday has learned that Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah was an ‘obsessive’ supporter of Malaysia’s opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim. And hours before the doomed flight left Kuala Lumpur it is understood 53-year-old Shah attended a controversial trial in which Ibrahim was jailed for five years. Campaigners say the politician, the key challenger to Malaysia’s ruling party, was the victim of a long-running smear campaign and had faced trumped-up charges. Police sources have confirmed that Shah was a vocal political activist – and fear that the court decision left him profoundly upset. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz2w4j4YV00 NEW DAILY MIRROR ARTICLE Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah was a fervent supporter of his country's opposition leader who was jailed for homosexuality - illegal in Malaysia - only hours before flight MH370 vanished with 239 passengers and crew on board, the Sunday Mirror can reveal. And in a new twist, it emerged that the pilot's wife and three children moved out of the family's home the day before the plane's disappearance. http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-n...#ixzz2w4jQtge8 I find it interesting the pilot's wife and children moved out the day before this happened it seems the pilot may have been suffering a personal crisis.
After his wife and kids left the house - as alleged, he still went to work the next day. Something aint straight in this story
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Interesting news about the senior pilot. He could be one of the conspirators as this doesn't look like an one person job. Unless he knocked the co-pilot and locked himself in the cockpit, but then to disable some of the communications system such as the one that made the plane disappear from the military radar, he would have needed some help. This is assuming that the plane was flying till 8 11 am If a stronger objective is discovered, the solution may come quickly

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Only people truly in love w/ India are Pakis and some neighbors' date=' I am not too sure that the rest would get much satisfaction out of hurting Ind .... Assuming that the plane flew for 6 hours or so, it could have hit Ind or any of the major targets near by including the Twin Towers in KL, if it wanted to[/quote'] Come on now. Let's get some Conspiracy theories going. What happened prior to Op Parakram? India started buying boat load of weapons from foreign vendors in a hurry.
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Come on now. Let's get some Conspiracy theories going. What happened prior to Op Parakram? India started buying boat load of weapons from foreign vendors in a hurry.
if you want to conspiracy theories related to Ind, then one is that with elections on, Ind's enemies wanted to strike terror
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if you want to conspiracy theories related to Ind' date=' then one is that with elections on, Ind's enemies wanted to strike terror[/quote'] What is the end result of terror? Because Indians are pretty used to terror attacks now and resulting impotent behaviour of the govt.
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This was just posted on Tomnods twitter- https://twitter.com/ThisDigitalLtd/s...256385/photo/1
The link didn't work, but you are probably referring to: BizoGYqCMAAv1f5.png:large Coordinated appear to be that of Straights of Malacca. In this case, the plane would have gone down at 2 40 am (last contact with military radar) .... On the other hand, there are reports of confirmed communication at 8 11 am .... Unless I got the coordinates wrong and this is somewhere in the Indian Ocean
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Because the northern parts of the traffic corridor include some tightly guarded airspace over India, Pakistan, and even some U.S. installations in Afghanistan, U.S. authorities believe it more likely the aircraft crashed into waters outside of the reach of radar south of India, one U.S. official told CNN. If it had flown farther north, it's likely it would have been detected by radar.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/03/15/world/asia/malaysia-airlines-plane/index.html More speculation.
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The link didn't work, but you are probably referring to: BizoGYqCMAAv1f5.png:large Coordinated appear to be that of Straights of Malacca. In this case, the plane would have gone down at 2 40 am (last contact with military radar) .... On the other hand, there are reports of confirmed communication at 8 11 am .... Unless I got the coordinates wrong and this is somewhere in the Indian Ocean
i was on tonmod for an hour. found nothing. saw this on their website. so thought it is something. they still have sent it for an analysis.
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Re-posting the timeline:

12:41 a.m.: Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 takes off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Malaysia heading for Beijing, China. The plane shows up on radar two minutes after taking off. 1:07 a.m.: The last automated data transmission is sent from the plane. U.S officials told ABC News they believe that sometime after this transmission the data reporting system was shut down. Sometime after this transmission Kuala Lumpur's air traffic control tells the plane's pilot they are handing off to air traffic control based in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The pilot responds, "All right. Good night." 1:21 a.m.: The plane's transponder, which transmits location and altitude, shuts down. Sources told ABC News that U.S. officials are “convinced that there was a manual intervention.” 1:22 a.m.: MH370 should have come to the navigational way-point called Igari point. Before it reached this point, Vietnamese air traffic control noticed they had lost contact with MH370, according to the Vietnam’s Civil Aviation Authority. 1:30 a.m.: The last moment that the plane was seen by Malaysian radar. 1:38 a.m.: Air traffic control in Ho Chi Minh City informs Kuala Lumpur air traffic control about the signal loss. Ho Chi Minh City asks two other planes to contact MH370. Neither plane is able to raise the pilot of MH370. At least one of the planes report getting a “buzz signal” and no voices, then losing the signal. 2:15 a.m.: Malaysian military defense radar picks up traces of the plane hundreds of miles west of MH370’s last contact point. The plane crosses over the Peninsular Malaysia and into the Strait of Malacca. The Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said Saturday that the flight path was “consistent with deliberate action by someone on the plane.” Following hours: In the hours after contact was lost MH370 "pings" a satellite several times. It's not clear if those pings include data that could reveal the plane's location. The Malaysian prime minister said Saturday that the satellite data revealed that the plane flew for approximately seven more hours after dropping off of radar. 6:32 a.m.: A broadcast call was made from Kuala Lumpur's air traffic control on emergency frequencies asking MH370 to call them. 6:51 a.m.: A broadcast call was made from Ho Chi Minh City's air traffic control on emergency frequencies asking MH370 to call them. 8:11 a.m.: The fight makes its last communication with a satellite seven hours and 31 minutes after taking off. Due to the amount of time the plane was in the air, officials are now searching an expansive region covering 5,000 miles from Kazakhstan to the South Indian Ocean
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more speculation http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/malaysia/10700652/Malaysia-Airline-MH370-911-style-terror-allegations-resurface-in-case-of-lost-plane.html An al-Qaeda supergrass told a New York court last week that four to five Malaysian men had been planning to take control of a plane using a bomb hidden in a shoe to blow open the cockpit door. Convicted British terrorist Saajid Badat reportedly said the Malaysian jihadists, including a pilot, were "ready to perform an act".

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Wow! I had seen a map of some sorts before but this is freaking real time!
amazing view. notice the rush out of US in US night time and rush into Europe. so less flights over africa, afghanistan,northern China, russia airbus has predicted India will need 1300 more aircrafts in the next 20 years as the % of Indians using flight services will increase from 5 to 25%. that space is going to get even more crowded
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That is a sign of the search moving towards the southern corridor (unless new clues show up) With the Southern Indian Ocean so wide and deep, to say that it will be challenging is probably an understatement. More like a case of hoping against hope. May be the S&R team can trace the plane to one of the islands or we hear demands from the hijackers If the plane is presumed to have crashed down south, the search may even be called off (As there is not a big case for risking additional lives in trying to salvage the wreckage). This would be a tragic and cruel end for many. Don't know what was the point of this type of madness. If the plane is indeed buried in the deep, may the souls of those on the plane rest in peace *signs off in despair*
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