Two senior researchers on Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 that shook the world concluded that the plane was lost due to a murder-suicide plot.
During the Sky News documentary MH370: Final Search, which aired Tuesday, John Cox, principal flight safety researcher and retired pilot, stumbled upon MH370’in He said his loss was not an accident.
He noted that the winding route of the plane left no doubt that the flight was taken over by one of the captains. “I think the evidence is very strong that without this controlled maneuver, the plane wouldn’t be able to fly its path through all the corners,” Cox said. Said.
He added that the flight path can only be taken by a person with expert knowledge and skill, thus causing him to suspect that the pilot and second officer were responsible for the path of this flight.
Cox, pilot Shah’s MH370’in He said he was the only one with the knowledge and experience to disable the data link system.
That’s why Cox called co-pilot First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid’in He doesn’t believe he played a role in the disappearance.
Canadian aviation accident investigator Larry Vance’in As he said in the documentary, the events leading up to the Malaysia Airlines crash were very simple.
An Australian widower, whose husband went missing on the ill-fated flight MH370, believes the plane deliberately crashed into the ocean.
Danica Weeks has spent years insisting that her Malaysia Airlines flight crashed due to mechanical failure.
Her husband, Paul, was one of 239 people on the ill-fated flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, which lost contact with the airlines shortly after takeoff and was never found.
But after a new analysis of satellite data by British aeronautical engineer Richard Godfrey found that the plane most likely crashed in the Indian Ocean, Western Australia, the mother of two now believes the crash was an act of willful murder.
On March 8, 2014, 239 passenger planes belonging to Malaysia Airlines disappeared over the Indian Ocean.
Nearly 26 countries participated in the 4-year $200 million international research effort, covering an area of more than 120,000 square meters.
While the wreckage is still unsolved, the fate and cause of the passenger plane crash remains one of aviation’s greatest mysteries.
Source: Daily Mail
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