Monday, March 31, 2014

Mystery of MH370 : Armed forces chief regret foreign media reports

KUALA LUMPUR: The armed forces chief has expressed regret over some foreign media reports in connection with the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines MH370, which appeared to have a fixed agenda to project Malaysia in a negative light.


General Tan Sri Zulkifeli Mohd Zin noted there were several untrue media reports while others were extreme and did not take into account the real situation or constraints faced by the Malaysian authorities in providing information on the incident.
 
“We have been accused of delay in providing information when each piece of information we get must be corroborated (with various national and foreign authorities), before taking any action.
 
"Only in certain situations, do we (Armed Forces) take action or respond to information on our own," he told reporters after the closing ceremony of the Warrior Exercise 15 Series 2014 here today.
 
He said some information could not be disclosed to the public because of the implications on ongoing investigations.
 
"Maybe, they (the foreign media) have their own agenda, which is why we have been so badly criticised," noted Zulkifeli.
 
Malaysia had prepared all the necessary responses, including providing information, based on existing regulations and guidance.
 
"We have done everything, including coordinating all sources. All information on the incident and the necessary action (taken) to search (for the aircraft) have been disclosed," he said. - BERNAMA

Mystery of MH370 : I never believed foreign media's negative reports

PUTRAJAYA: The father of a Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 passenger, Zamani Zakaria, says he had never believed speculation by the foreign media about the missing aircraft since the first day of the mishap.


Zamani, 56, father of Mohd Razahan, 23, said his family only relied on information from the Malaysia Airlines (MAS) and the Malaysian authorities.
 
"But sometimes the speculation affected our emotion, they should not accuse the Malaysian government without any proof," he said when asked to comment on several foreign media reports on the aircraft which went missing on March 8.
 
He stressed that the foreign media should not arbitrarily make accusations in the current situation whereby the search and rescue (SAR) operation was being rigorously conducted by Malaysia and 26 other countries.
 
Zamani said SAR which had entered the 24th day also showed MAS was always in contact with them to inform the latest development.
 
A local newspaper reported today that the eldest child of the pilot of MH370, Aisyah Zaharie, 28, had expressed anger and disappointment over the report by a foreign portal, Daily Mail, which she claimed slandered her father.
 
The newspaper report quoted Aishah's Facebook as saying 'Slander is worse than murder. I will not forgive you', when referring to the report.
 
Meanwhile, Zamani, when asked about his wife Kamariah Sharif's condition said, she believes her son-in-law and daughter Norli Akmar Hamid, 33, were still alive because there was no proof to link the objects found at sea, to MH370. -BERNAMA

Mystery Of MH370 : Search intensifies

KUALA LUMPUR: The search for the missing Malaysian Airlines (MAS) jetliner in the remote Indian Ocean has been intensified with the deployment of 10 aircraft and 10 ships.


The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA), in a statement said, the aircraft included a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) P3 Orion, a Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) P3 Orion, a Japanese P3 Orion, a Japan Coast Guard Gulfstream jet.
A Chinese People’s Liberation Army Air Force Ilyushin IL-76, a South Korea P3 Orion, a United States Navy P8 Poseidon, two Royal Malaysian Air Force C-130 Hercules, and a civil jet acting as communications relay.
AMSA said the ships comprised HMAS Success and HMAS Toowoomba, seven Chinese ships and a merchant vessel.
"Some parts of the search area will experience low cloud and rain throughout the day," it said.
Flight MH370, carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew, left the KL International Airport at 12.41 am on March 8 and disappeared from radar screens about an hour later while over the South China Sea. It was to have landed in Beijing at 6.30 am on the same day.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak then announced on March 24, seventeen days after the disappearance of Flight MH370 that it "ended in the southern Indian Ocean".
On Sunday, the Australian authority said a number of objects retrieved by HMAS Success and Haixun 01 on Saturday had been examined and were believed to be not related to the missing airliner.-- BERNAMA

Leaders of the international forces currently based in Perth to search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 stand in front of a Royal Australian Air Force AP-3C Orion aircraft before a visit by Australia's Prime Minister Tony Abbott at RAAF Base Pearce. REUTERS Photo

Mystery of MH370 : Capt denies Daily Mail report

SHAH ALAM: Malaysian Pilots Association vice-president Captain Abdul Manan Mansor today denied a report by Daily Mail online allegedly quoting him saying that the missing MH370 pilot Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah was "psychologically unstable" after a marriage break up.


Abdul Manan not only denied claiming Zaharie was mentally unstable, he also clarified that he has never spoken to Daily Mail"I didn't speak to Daily Mail, I didn't say that Zaharie was psychologically unstable.
"You can disregard the entire article," he said.
The Malaysia Aviation Management College chief executive asserted that he did not know Zaharie personally and would not have known of any marital problems he might or might not have had.
"I don't know Zaharie personally, there are so many pilots registered in Malaysia, it is not unusual for some of us to not cross paths," he said, adding that he also did not know Zaharie's wife or children.



Mystery of MH370 : Lost In Indian Ocean

KUALA LUMPUR: Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak will be visiting the MH370 search operations centre in Perth, Australia on Wednesday.


Acting Transport Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein said today Najib will be making a working visit to the Pearce Air Force Base to see the operations firsthand and to thank all personnel involved in the multinational search effort, including the Malaysian crew.  
Hishammuddin said Najib had also been given a full update on the search operations during a conversation with Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott earlier this morning.
Speaking to reporters at the daily press conference here, Hishammuddin said five objects had been retrieved by the ships HMAS Success and the Haixun on Saturday
"However, it was found that none of these objects were related to MH370."
He said on Sunday, an Australian aircraft had sighted seven potential objects, while a Korean P3-Orion had made visuals of three potential objects. The Haixun, a Chinese ship, has been tasked to retrieve these objects. 
Malaysian Airlines aircraft MH370, carrying 239 passengers and crew, first went missing on March 8. It is believed to have crashed in the southern Indian Ocean.   
Acting Transport Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein today Najib will be making a working visit to the Pearce Air Force Base to see the operations firsthand and to thank all personnel involved in the multinational search effort, including the Malaysian crew. Pix by NSTP/Mohamad Shahril Badri Saali



Sunday, March 23, 2014

Mystery of MH370 : Search ops in Indian Sea resume

Below is a media release from Australian Maritime Safety Authority


*All times are expressed in Australian Eastern Daylight Saving time. Please note departure times are approximate. 
Search operations in the Southern Indian Ocean for the missing Malaysia Airlines aircraft will continue today in the Australian Search and Rescue Region. 
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) reiterates this is a challenging search operation and continues to hold grave fears for the passengers and crew on board the missing flight. 
Several small objects of interest were identified by air observers on a civil aircraft in yesterday’s search. 
A Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) P3 Orion aircraft with specialist electro-optic observation equipment was diverted to the location, arriving after the first aircraft left but only reported sighting clumps of seaweed. 
The RNZAF P3 Orion dropped a datum marker buoy to track the movement of the material. 
Further attempts will be made today to establish whether the objects sighted are related to MH370. 
Yesterday, China provided a satellite image to Australia possibly showing a 22.5 metre floating object in the southern Indian Ocean. AMSA plotted the position and it fell within yesterday’s search area.
The object was not sighted during yesterday’s search. 
AMSA has used this information in the development of the search area, taking drift modelling into  account. 
Today’s search has been split into two areas within the same proximity covering 59,000 square kilometres about 2500 kilometres south-west of Perth.
These areas have been determined by drift modelling. 
A total of eight aircraft have been tasked by AMSA’s Rescue Coordination Centre to undertake today’s search activities. 
The civil aircraft are two Bombardier Global Express, a Gulfstream 5 and an Airbus 319. 
One civil aircraft departed Perth for the search area just after 9am. Three other civil aircraft departed for the search area between 11am and midday. 
The United States Navy P8 Poseidon aircraft departed for the search area about 11am.
Source: AMSA website




Mystery of MH370 : Pallet, belts sighted in search

PERTH: Australian officials said Sunday that a wooden cargo pallet along with belts or straps have been spotted in the remote Indian Ocean by one of the aircraft deployed in the hunt for a missing Malaysian jet.


   The objects were seen by a civilian aircraft assisting in the search for  Malaysia Airlines MH370 on Saturday in what the Australian Maritime Safety  Authority confirmed was the “first visual sighting in the search so far”.
 
   “Part of the description was a wooden pallet and a number of other items  which were nondescript around it and some belts of some different colours  around it as well, strapping belts of different lengths,” AMSA aircraft  operations coordinator Mike Barton said.
 
   “We tried to refind that yesterday, one of the New Zealand aircraft, and  unfortunately they didn’t find it. That’s the nature of it — you only have to  be off by a few hundred metres in a fast-travelling aircraft,” he told a press  briefing.
 
   Barton said Sunday’s search, which will involve four military and four  civilian aircraft, would return to the area to try and zero in on the objects  again.
 
   Aviation experts had advised that wooden pallets were quite commonly used  to pack goods in planes, Barton added, describing it as a “possible lead”.
 
   Such pallets were usually packed into another container loaded into the  belly of the aircraft he said, adding however that they were also used in the  shipping industry.
 
   He cautioned that the nearby straps “could be anything” and “until we  refind these items and have a good look at them it’s hard to say whether they  are associated with this or not.”
 
   A “methodical search” would also continue of a 59,000 square kilometre  (22,800 square mile) expanse of sea to try and locate large items captured by  satellite imagery on March 16 and 18.
 
   Barton said the operation had shifted away from an earlier emphasis on  radar to focus on visual examination “of a more defined area based on the  satellite imagery.”
 
    He said looking into the sun and through haze from a much lower altitude  than a satellite was making things difficult for search crews.
 
   Sunday’s weather was not as good as the previous day’s, with sea fog and  low cloud hampering visibility early in the day, though Barton said it appeared  to be clearing and he was hopeful of a “full search in with some good  conditions.”
 
    But the major challenge was the site’s remoteness.
 
   “The aircraft are operating at extreme ranges... At 2,500 kilometres away  they’re operating at the limits of their endurance and only having a short  period of one to two hours in the search area and back again,” he said. -- AFP




Mystery of MH370 : Ocean hunt focuses on pallet

PERTH, Australia: Planes and ships scrambled Sunday to find a pallet and other debris in a remote patch of the southern Indian Ocean to determine whether the objects were from the Malaysia Airlines jet that has been missing for more than two weeks.


The pallet was spotted by a search plane Saturday, but has not been closely examined. Wooden pallets are commonly used in shipping, but can also be used in cargo containers carried on planes. 
It was the latest in a series of clues experts and searchers are trying to run down to solve the mystery of what happened to Flight 370 when it disappeared on March 8 with 239 people on board. 
ike Barton, chief of Australian Maritime Safety Authority’s rescue coordination centre, told reporters in Canberra, Australia, that the wooden pallet was spotted by a civilian search aircraft on Saturday , and it was surrounded by several other objects including what appeared to be strapping belts of different colours. 
A New Zealand P3 Orion military plane was then sent to find it but failed, he said. 
“So, we’ve gone back to that area again today to try and re-find it,” Barton said.  A merchant ship in the area has also been sent to try to identify the material.  
“We went to some of the expert airlines and the use of wooden pallets is quite common in the industry,” Barton said.
“They’re usually packed into another container which is loaded in the belly of the aircraft. ... It’s a possible lead, but we will need to be very certain that this is a pallet because pallets are used in the shipping industry as well.” 
Malaysia Airlines asked The Associated Press to submit questions via email for comment on whether Flight 370 had wooden pallets aboard when it disappeared. There was no immediate response. 
When Brazilian searchers in 2009 were looking for debris from Air France Flight 447 after it mysteriously plunged into the Atlantic Ocean, the first thing they found was a wooden pallet.
The military first reported that the pallet came from the Air France flight, but then said six hours later that the plane had not been carrying any wooden pallets. 
In Australia, eight search planes departed from a military base near Perth on Sunday to scour an area about 2,500 kilometers (1,550 miles) away in an extremely isolated part of the southern Indian Ocean.
Satellite images, the most recent released by China on Saturday, have showed large objects floating in the area that experts want to check to see if they came from the jet. 
Air and sea searches since Thursday have not produced any results. 
John Young, manager of the Australian Maritime Safety Authority’s emergency response division, said Sunday’s search was mainly relying on human eyes. 
“Today is really a visual search again, and visual searches take some time. They can be difficult,” he said. 
Barton said while the weather was not as good at the start of the day with sea fog and low cloud, it was clearing up later Sunday. 
Despite the frustrating lack of answers, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott was upbeat. 
“Obviously we have now had a number of very credible leads and there is increasing hope — no more than hope, no more than hope — that we might be on the road to discovering what did happen to this ill-fated aircraft,” Abbott told reporters in Papua New Guinea. 
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority said it had refined the search based on the latest clue from the Chinese satellite showing an object that appeared to be 22 meters (72 feet) by 13 meters (43 feet). It said the object’s position also fell within Saturday’s search area but it had not been sighted. 
Sunday’s search has been split into two areas within the same proximity covering 59,000 square kilometers (22,800 square miles). These areas have been determined by drift modelling, the AMSA said. 
Malaysian Defence Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein put a message on his Twitter account Sunday asking those in churches around the country to offer a “prayer please” for the passengers and crew on Fight 370. 
More than 300 Malaysian cycling enthusiasts rode their bikes to the Kuala Lumpur airport to remember the people onboard the jet. The cyclists decorated the bikes with small Malaysian flags and stickers that read “Pray for MH370.” 
The latest satellite image is another clue in the baffling search for Flight 370, which dropped off air traffic control screens March 8 over the Gulf of Thailand with 239 people on board. 
“China hopes that these data will be helpful for searching and rescuing efforts,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in a statement. 
The missing plane, which had been bound for Beijing, carried 153 Chinese passengers. 
After about a week of confusion, Malaysian authorities said pings sent by the Boeing 777-200 for several hours after it disappeared indicated that the plane ended up in one of two huge arcs: a northern corridor stretching from Malaysia to Central Asia, or a southern corridor that stretches toward Antarctica. 
The discovery of the initial two objects by a satellite led several countries to send planes and ships to a stretch of the ocean southwest of Australia. 
Two military planes from China have arrived in Perth, and the AMSA said they would join the search on Monday. They join Australian, New Zealand and U.S. aircraft. Japanese planes are also expected soon. 
Because the search area is a four-hour flight from land, some of the planes can search for about only two hours before they must fly back. Others may be able to stay for up to five hours before heading back to the base. 
Malaysian authorities have not ruled out any possible explanation for what happened to the jet, but have said the evidence so far suggests it was deliberately turned back across Malaysia to the Strait of Malacca, with its communications systems disabled.
They are unsure what happened next. 
Police are considering the possibilities of hijacking, sabotage, terrorism or issues related to the mental health of the pilots or anyone else on board. --AP

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Mystery of MH370 : Anger, Desepration In 3rd Week.... Be Patient, Still...there is a hope!

Australian rescuers stepped up the search for missing Malaysian Flight MH370 as frustration at two weeks of fruitless efforts boiled over Saturday in Beijing with police having to restrain angry relatives of the passengers.


Six planes, including four Orion anti-submarine aircraft packed with state-of-the-art surveillance equipment, joined the search for debris from the aircraft over a remote stretch of the Indian Ocean, 2,500 kilometres (1,500 miles) southwest of Perth.

Chinese, British and Australian naval ships were all steaming to the same area where two floating objects -- possibly plane wreckage -- were picked out on grainy satellite pictures.
With planes from China and Japan also expected to join the hunt, the sudden concentration of resources on the basis of such inconclusive evidence reflects growing desperation after 14 days of piecemeal progress.
There have been no sightings of interest since Thursday, when Australia released the satellite photos taken on March 16.
Two-thirds of the 227 passengers on board were Chinese and growing anger among their family members over Malaysia's handling of the crisis exploded Saturday during a meeting with Malaysian officials at a Beijing hotel.
Police were forced to intervene as relatives rushed towards the officials, demanding answers which they accuse the Malaysians of withholding.
"Government of Malaysia, tell us the truth! Give us back our loved ones!" they shouted.
After the police stepped in, the Malaysian officials left the room.
"We can't bear it any longer," one of the relatives said later. "They're offering us compensation, but we've lost our entire families.
Australian and Malaysian officials have described the satellite images released Thursday as the most "credible" lead to date, but failure to find anything soon will be a body blow to a search operation already weakened by false leads and dead ends.
"At this stage we are planning to continue indefinitely," Australian Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss said during a visit to the Perth air force base where the search planes are flying from.
The distance from Australia's west coast allows the Orions only about two hours of actual search time before they must turn around with enough fuel to get back to Perth.
Britain's Telegraph newspaper published what appeared to be the full transcript of communications with Flight MH370's cockpit crew up until the moment it dropped off civilian radar.
The transcript, which ended with the final words "All right, good night" -- believed to have been spoken by the co-pilot -- contained no fresh clues to what diverted MH370 from its intended flight path from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8.
Malaysian investigators have stuck to their assumption that it was the result of a "deliberate action" by someone on board.
Three scenarios have gained particular attention: hijacking, pilot sabotage, and a sudden mid-air crisis that incapacitated the flight crew and left the plane to fly on auto-pilot for several hours until it ran out of fuel and crashed.
Finding wreckage in the remote southern Indian Ocean would undermine the hijacking theory, which many of the relatives continue to cling to.
Sarah Bajc, the partner of American passenger Philip Wood, voiced concern that the sudden focus on a particular section of the Indian Ocean was happening at the expense of a land search along a northern route the plane may have taken over South and Central Asia.
"I believe, and I think many people believe, the passengers are being held for some other purpose. But so far that doesn't seem to be listened to," Bajc told CNN
"If there's a chance it was taken by an abductor of some sort, then we should be putting at least some of our resources towards looking on land," she added.
As it enters its third week, the search for MH370 has become one of the longest -- and certainly largest -- in modern aviation history.
No confirmed wreckage was ever found of a Korean Air jetliner that exploded in mid air over the Andaman Sea in 1987 as the result of a bomb placed on board by North Korean agents.
Expectations based on advances in technology, coupled with the modern era's relentless 24-hour media coverage, would seem to rule out public acceptance of the idea that MH370 will never be found.
"This is going to be a long-haul effort," Malaysian Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said Friday.
Scott Hamilton, managing director of US-based aviation consultancy Leeham Co., said the investigation would simply continue for as long as it takes.
"This is, in all probability, a criminal act, and thereby presumed murder of more than 230 people," Hamilton said.
"Worse, if this is some kind of terror event that is a precursor to something bigger in the future, authorities will presumably do all they can to make this determination and work to prevent it -- whatever 'it' is," he added.
Malaysia has asked the FBI to help recover data it said was deleted from a home flight simulator belonging to the plane's chief pilot, Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, but otherwise no evidence has emerged to implicate him.
Australian Defence personnel keeping guard in front of the RAAF Orions, extensively used in search of the missing airliner -- AFP photo


Mystery of MH370 : China Is Now Released A New Satellite Image (Hopes are there!)

KUALA LUMPUR: China has released a new satellite image of a large floating object in the Indian Ocean that could be related to missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, officials said Saturday.


   Malaysian Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein announced the news during  his daily press briefing when he was handed a note by an aide.
 
   “The news that I just received is that the Chinese ambassador received  satellite images of floating objects in the southern corridor and they will be  sending ships to verify,” Hishammuddin said.
 
   In a later press statement, the transport ministry clarified that there was  one “suspected” object with an estimated size of 22.5 metres by 13 metres (74  by 43 feet).
 
   Hishammuddin had provided different dimensions which the statement said was  the result of a telephone miscommunication.
 
   Chinese state television later released a copy of the undated, grainy  satellite image.
 
   Attached coordinates suggested it was in roughly the same area of remote  ocean as two possible objects spotted on satellite images taken March 16 and  released by the Australian government on Thursday.
 
   China’s Xinhua news agency said the object was spotted 120 kilometres from  those spotted by Australia.
 
   Australian and US spotter planes have been scouring the area for the past  three days, but without finding any sign of the suspected wreckage. -- AFP
This image provided by China's State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense shows a floating object seen at sea next to the descriptor which was added by the source. The image was captured around noon, on March 18, 2014 (Tuesday) by a Chinese satellite in S44’57 E90’13 in south Indian Ocean. It shows what is suspected to be a floating object 22 meters long and 13 meters wide. It is about 120 km south (slightly to the west) of the suspected objects released by Australia. (AP Photo/ China State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense) -- AP photo


Mystery of MH370 : US may give sonar gear to M'sia for search Read more: UPDATE 4 (Day 15) MISSING MH370: US may give sonar gear to M'sia for search

WASHINGTON: The Pentagon is weighing a request from Malaysia for sonar equipment to bolster the so-far frustrated search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, as concerns grow that any debris may have sunk to the bottom of the sea.


Malaysia's Defence Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein asked for undersea surveillance equipment in a phone call with US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel, as the Pentagon tallied US$2.5 million in costs so far in the nearly two-week-old search. 
 
"No specific request was made for any particular type. It was just a general request for us to help them locate the wreckage and/or the black box," Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby told Reuters on Friday.
 
"The Secretary said he would consider the request, that he would examine whether we had anything that was both available and potentially helpful and that he would get back to the minister in the very near future."
 
The US Navy has a variety of active and passive sonar systems, some of which search the ocean for objects by emitting sound "pings" and monitoring the echoes that bounce back and others that listen for sound like an undersea microphone.
 
One system, called a "Towed Pinger Locator", is towed behind ships and is used to listen for downed Navy and commercial aircraft at depths of up to 20,000 feet (6000 metres, according to the US Navy's website.
 
The US military loaned this technology to France during its two-year effort to locate the black box from an Air France jetliner that crashed into the Atlantic Ocean in June 2009.
 
The P-8 and P-3 spy planes, which the United States is already deploying in the Malaysian jetliner search, also carry "sonobuoys" that can be dropped into the sea and use sonar signals to search the waters below.
 
"Sound actually travels a long distance under water, depending on the conditions," Kirby said.
 
"Temperature, current, the underwater topography, all of these things change the way sound travels underwater. But sound can travel a long, long way."
 
One big question will be where to drop any sonar equipment.
 
Investigators suspect Flight MH370, which took off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing shortly after midnight on March 8, was deliberately diverted thousands of miles from its scheduled path.
 
They say they are focusing on hijacking or sabotage but have not ruled out technical problems.
 
There has been no confirmed sign of wreckage so far and Australia's Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss cautioned on Friday that anything once floating "may have slipped to the bottom."
 
Hishammuddin, who is also acting transport minister, has acknowledged that the clock was ticking.
 
The plane's "black box" voice and data recorder only transmits an electronic signal for about 30 days before its battery dies, after which it will be far more difficult to locate.
 
"We've got three more weeks to find those pingers on the black boxes --  or else this plane may never be found," said Alan Diehl, who spent 40 years investigating aircraft accidents for the US National Transportation Safety Board, Federal Aviation Administration and US military.
 
He said the Pentagon should send submarines and more aircraft.
 
In its first disclosure of the cost of the US search, the Pentagon estimated about US$2.5 million had been spent so far. It added the US Defence Department had set aside about US$4 million -- enough to cover operations through early April.   -- Reuters