Sunday, March 30, 2014
MH370 - Betulkah Serpihan MH370: Kalau Dah CIA Dan MI6 Melibatkan Diri, Korang Akan Percayakah?
Search for missing Malaysia Airlines plane: is this the wreckage of flight MH370?
Terrorist
theories grow as it is confirmed that international security services
are involved in the search for missing flight MH370
12:58AM GMT 30 Mar 2014
British secret services are investigating the disappearance of Flight MH370, Malaysia's transport minister said on Saturday. The disclosure that MI6 as well as the CIA are assisting the Malaysian authorities will fuel renewed speculation the aircraft was hijacked by terrorists.
Last night,
hope was growing among the search teams that a part of the wreckage
might finally have been found, three weeks after the plane vanished.
A photograph of
an object floating in the southern Indian Ocean was taken by a Royal
New Zealand Air Force plane which has been combing the seas for clues.
Ships have been despatched to try to reach the object even as one expert
cautioned it could part of the equipment found on-board a shipping
trawler.
The New Zealand
image followed a few hours after Chinese and Australian teams reported
seeing possible debris from the plane in the same area.
Until now, all possible debris have proved to be unconnected to the missing passenger jet.
As the reports emerged last night attention turned again to what might have caused the plane to vanish.
Hishammuddin
Hussein, Malaysia's acting transport minister, said yesterday that MI6
and the CIA are working with Chinese spy agencies in determining what
happened to the Boeing 777 and the 239 passengers and crew on-board.
Yesterday Mr
Hishammuddin stopped short of plumping for one theory over any other. He
said that MH370's disappearance was due to "terrorism, hijacking,
personal and psychological problems, or technical failure".
"These
scenarios have been discussed at length with different intelligence
agencies," he said. "When all the agencies are comfortable in what is
able to be released is public, it is for the [Malaysian] chief of police
to do that."
Crash
investigators believe the disappearance of the plane – and the decision
to disable the communications system – appears to have been a deliberate
action but have found no evidence of a motive.
MI6 is
understood to have assisted with extensive background checks on each of
the 239 passengers and crew aboard the plane but nothing suspicious has
emerged.
Mr Hishammuddin
said MI6 has also been involved in examining 'pings' emitted by the
plane which are being used to try to locate its route during the seven
hours after its communications systems were disabled.
"Now that we
are talking about satellite data and imagery, the CIA has been on board,
Chinese intelligence has been on board, MI6 has been on board," Mr
Hishammuddin said.
The Malaysia
Airlines flight vanished off radar screens en route from Kuala Lumpur to
Beijing more than three weeks ago. Speculation has been rife as to the
cause of its disappearance but an explanation has so far proved elusive.
The plane
turned wildly off course, its communications systems were 'deliberately'
disconnected and then it carried on flying south over the Indian Ocean.
It is thought to have crashed into the sea off the coast of Australia
after running out of fuel.
The suggestion
that intelligence agencies are involved will renew speculation its
disappearance was a criminal act rather than a mechanical failure.
A fortnight ago
the Sunday Telegraph disclosed that an al-Qaeda supergrass had
previously warned secret services 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.
The terror plot
was hatched, said the supergrass, in an Afghan terror training camp by
the mastermind behind the 9/11 attack on America.
The Malaysian
police investigation has centred largely on the actions of MH370's pilot
Zaharie Ahmad Shah, but an examination of a flight simulator seized
from his home has uncovered "nothing sinister," Mr Hishammuddin said.
Zaharie, 53, a father of three and veteran pilot, used the simulator to play three flying games.
The different
theories have done nothing to ease the anguish of families. The
possibility the plane was seized by jihadi terrorists was raised after
it emerged that Saajid Badat, a British-born Muslim from Gloucester,
said that he had been instructed at a terrorist training camp in
Afghanistan to give a shoe bomb to the Malaysians at the terror camp.
Giving evidence
earlier this month at the trial in New York of Sulaiman Abu Ghaith,
Osama bin Laden's son-in-law, Badat said: "I gave one of my shoes to the
Malaysians. I think it was to access the cockpit."
Badat, who
spoke via video link and is in hiding in the UK, said the Malaysian plot
was masterminded by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the principal architect of
9/11.
According to
Badat, Mohammed kept a list of the world's tallest buildings and crossed
out New York's Twin Towers after the September 11, 2001 attacks with
hijacked airliners as "a joke to make us laugh".
Badat told the court that he believed the Malaysians, including the pilot, were "ready to perform an act."
During the
meeting, the possibility was raised that the cockpit door might be
locked. Badat told the court: "So I said, 'How about I give you one of
my bombs to open a cockpit door?' " The disclosure that Malaysians were
plotting a 9/11-style attack raises the prospect that both pilots were
overpowered and the plane intended for use as a fuel-filled bomb. One
possible target, if the scenario is correct, will have been the Petronas
Towers in Kuala Lumpur, a symbol of Malaysia's modernity and the
world's tallest buildings from 1998 until 2004.
Lawyers in the
US acting for the family of a missing passenger, however, believe the
disappearance has been caused by some form of mechanical failure.
Both Boeing and Malaysia Airlines are facing legal demands to disclose what they knew of those possible mechanical failings.
"We are working
on the theory that it is a design defect," said Monica Kelly, a US
attorney acting on behalf of Januarai Siregar, whose son, Firman, was on
the flight.
The "Petition
for Discovery", lodged in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, is
intended to force both Boeing and Malaysia to release all the material
they hold on the aircraft.
Until now both Boeing and Malaysia Airlines have steadfastly refused to comment on what may have caused the plane to disappear.
But details of a
number of incidents involving other Boeing 777s have emerged, including
a cockpit fire at Cairo Airport in July 2011.
Although
passengers and crew were evacuated safely, investigators found that the
blaze was caused by a short circuit igniting an oxygen pipe.
Regulators in
America and Europe issued a directive ordering the replacement of the
oxygen pipes with a replacement less likely to conduct electricity. The
work is estimated to cost about £1,500 to put right but last week
Malaysia Airlines refused to say if the specific work had been done.
A spokesman
said: "All mandatory orders issued by aviation authorities relating to
aircraft in our fleet have been complied with by Malaysia Airlines."
In the court
petition, Mr Firman's lawyers, have demanded details of who designed and
manufactured the oxygen system. It has also demanded Boeing release
documents showing who had information "of the evidence of findings of
corrosion and fractures in the fuselage of the subject aircraft and
other 277-200ER aircraft that could lead to catastrophic fatal
depressurisation of the cockpit."
The petition
has also demanded Boeing provides details of who was responsible for
servicing the plane and who last inspected the fuselage and
communications system.
Malaysia
Airlines in turn is facing a demand to provide details of who was
responsible for training and carrying out psychological evaluations of
the crew.
The airline is
also facing a demand to provide information about previous aircraft
damage incidents and who was responsible for training crew in the event
of a cockpit fire or depressurisation.
Yesterday a
Chinese surveillance plane yesterday spotted three objects – coloured
white, red and orange – in a new search zone west of Perth and an
Australian P3 Orion spotted numerous items. Though the colours of the
objects appeared to match Malaysia Airlines' colours, the source of the
objects has yet to be identified. Several small objects spotted by
planes on Friday were yesterday picked up by Australian and Chinese
ships and were found to be unrelated to the plane.
Eight aircraft
and four ships conducted searches across 97,000 square miles yesterday,
with another five ships due to join the search today.
Air
Vice-Marshal Kevin Short, the head of New Zealand's military, said
authorities expected parts of the plane to be floating, including fuel
tanks, composite materials and plastics.
Authorities
have abandoned a search area in which they had scoured for days for
objects spotted by five satellites and instead moved to an entirely new
zone about 700 miles to the north. The new zone, spanning about 123,000
square miles, is in calmer waters and closer to shore, allowing aircraft
to spend more time flying overhead.
But the area is
still 1,150 miles from Perth and was described by Australian prime
minister Tony Abbott as inhospitable, inaccessible and "extraordinarily
remote".
"We are trying
to find small bits of wreckage in a vast ocean and while we are throwing
everything we have at it, the task goes on," he said.
Mr Hishammuddin
met with Malaysian families of passengers and crew aboard the plane and
indicated that he has not given up hope of finding "possible
survivors". Malaysia's government and Malaysia Airlines last Monday
declared that the plane had crashed in the southern Indian Ocean and
that no passengers survived, though no wreckage has yet been found.
"Miracles do happen, remote or otherwise," Mr Hishammuddin said.
"I cannot give
them [relatives] false hope ... No matter how remote the odds, we will
pray, hope against hope, and continue to search for possible survivors."
Families of
some of the 153 Chinese passengers aboard the plane are planning to
travel to Malaysia to confront authorities. Some Chinese family members
have accused Malaysian authorities of hiding information about the
flight and bungling the search.
Steve Wang, a
representative of some of the families, said Malaysian authorities "have
not been able to answer all our questions".
"It's either
they are not in charge of a certain aspect of work or that it's still
being investigated, or it's not convenient for them to comment," he
said.
1 orang berkata:
asics shoes
polo ralph lauren
cheap ray ban sunglasses
adidas nmd
ed hardy
polo ralph lauren outlet
michael kors handbags wholesale
nike blazer low
michael kors handbags
nike huarache
Post a Comment