2 new search corridors - Indian ocean and now towards Kazakhstan.
In this photo released by The Royal Malaysian Navy, a Royal Malaysian
Navy Fennec helicopter prepares to depart to aid in the search and
rescue efforts for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane over the Straits
of Malacca, Malaysia, Thursday, March 13, 2014. Planes sent Thursday to
check the spot where Chinese satellite images showed possible debris
from the missing Malaysian jetliner found nothing, Malaysia's civil
aviation chief said, deflating the latest lead in the six-day hunt. The
hunt for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370 has been punctuated by
false leads since it disappeared with 239 people aboard about an hour
after leaving Kuala Lumpur for Beijing early Saturday.
Latest update: Police began searching the home of
the pilot of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight on Saturday, after the
country's prime minister confirmed the plane was suspected to have been
deliberately diverted, a senior police official told Reuters.
Prime Minister Najib Razak's statement confirmed days of mounting
speculation that the disappearance of the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777
was not accidental, and underlines the massive task for searchers who
have been scouring vast areas of ocean. "In view of this latest
development, the Malaysian authorities have refocused their
investigation into the crew and passengers on board," Najib said,
stressing they were still investigating all possibilities as to why the
plane deviated so drastically from its original flight path.
Malaysia's leader Saturday said communications aboard a missing jet
were switched off and its course deliberately changed by someone on
board before the aircraft disappeared a week ago, but stopped short of
saying it had been hijacked.
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, Prime Minister Najib Razak
told a nationally televised press conference.
The movement of the plane in the interim period, during which it
changed direction and passed back over the Malaysian peninsula towards
the Indian Ocean, was "consistent with deliberate action by someone on
the plane," Najib said.
"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 added.
Najib said his announcement was based on new information from satellite contact with the plane and military radar data.
The combined data suggested "with a high degree of certainty" that
the plane's two automated communications systems -- Aircraft
Communications Addressing and Reporting System (ACARS) and its
transponder -- were "switched off" one after the other before it reached
the point over the South China Sea where it dropped out of civilian
radar contact.
It then turned back and flew in a westerly direction back over peninsular Malaysia before turning northwest.
The last confirmed communication between the plane and satellite was
at 8:11 am, Najib said, adding that investigators were calculating how
far the aircraft may have flown afterwards.
So far, experts had located the last point of communication as being
inside one of two large geographical corridors: a northern corridor
stretching from the border of Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan to northern
Thailand, and a southern corridor stretching from Indonesia to the
southern Indian ocean.
"This new satellite information has a significant impact on the
nature and scope of the search operation," the prime minister said.
"We are ending our operations in the South China Sea and reassessing the
redeployment of our assets. We are working with the relevant countries
to request all information relevant to the search, including radar
data," he added.
Indian Navy finds nothing... yet
Indian Navy ships supported by surveillance planes and helicopters
are scouring Andaman Sea islands for a third day without any success in
finding evidence of a missing Malaysia Airlines jet.
VSR Murthy, a top Indian coast guard official, says the search has
been expanded farther west into the Bay of Bengal on Saturday. Nearly a
dozen ships, patrol vessels, surveillance aircraft and helicopters have
been deployed but Murthy says, "We have got nothing so far."
Seeing no headway, Malaysian authorities suggested Friday a new
search area of 9,000 square kilometers (3,474 square miles) to India
along the Chennai coast in the Bay of Bengal, India's Defence Ministry
said in a statement.
Analysis of electronic pulses picked up from a missing Malaysian
airliner shows it could have run out of fuel and crashed into the Indian
Ocean after it flew hundreds of miles off course, a source familiar
with official US assessments said on Friday.
The source, who is familiar with data the US government is receiving
from the investigation into the disappearance of the Malaysia Airlines
plane, said the other, less likely possibility was that it flew on
towards India.
The data obtained from pulses the plane sent to satellites had been
interpreted to provide two different analyses because it was ambiguous,
said the source, who declined to be identified because the investigation
was continuing.
But it offers the first real clues as to the fate of Flight MH370, which
officials increasingly believe was deliberately diverted off its
scheduled course from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. The Boeing 777-200ER was
carrying 239 people.
Two sources familiar with the probe earlier said Malaysian military
radar data showed a plane that investigators suspect was Flight MH370
following a commonly used navigational route toward the Middle East and
Europe when it was last spotted by radar early on March 8, northwest of
Malaysia.
The electronic pulses were believed to have been transmitted for several
hours after the plane flew out of radar range, said the source familiar
with the data.
The most likely possibility is that after travelling northwest, the
airliner did a sharp turn to the south, into the Indian Ocean where
officials think, based on the available data, it flew until it ran out
of fuel and crashed into the sea, added the source.
The other interpretation from the pulses is that Flight MH370 continued
to fly to the northwest and headed over Indian territory, said the
source.
Pilot turned plane
Speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, the official cited Malaysian
military radar data that investigators believe indicate the Boeing 777
may have radically changed course and headed northwest towards the
Indian Ocean.
"It has to be a skilled, competent and a current pilot," the official said.
"He knew how to avoid the civilian radar. He appears to have studied how to avoid it."
The intended flight path for the Kuala Lumpur-Beijing flight was to be north over the South China Sea and Vietnam.
The new information, coupled with multiple corroborative but unconfirmed
reports, suggests the investigation into the disappearance of Malaysia
Airlines flight MH370 was increasingly focusing on something going wrong
in the cockpit.
Analysts have said that could include a sudden loss of cabin pressure or
other mechanical event that incapacitated the pilots, catastrophic
pilot error, or more sinister possibilities such as the plane being
commandeered by a hijacker or rogue member of the flight crew, or pilot
suicide.
All signs so far point to a "controlled, deliberate act, not a
mechanical failure", said Scott Hamilton, managing director of US-based
aviation consultancy Leeham Co.
The mounting reports of an unexplained banking to the west have
coincided with a shift of search and rescue resources toward the Indian
Ocean.
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