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MH370: China says its satellite pictures may show crash site (live updates)
Follow live updates as the search goes on for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 which disappeared early last Saturday morning with 239 passengers on board.
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Malaysian official says missing plane was hijacked
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — A Malaysian investigation into the missing flight 370 has concluded that one or more people with flying experience switched off communications devices and deliberately steered the airliner off-course, a Malaysian government official involved in the investigation said Saturday.
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The passengers on board MH370
Among the 239 people on board flight MH370, which vanished six days ago, was a party of feted Chinese calligraphers, a couple returning to their young sons after a beach getaway and a construction worker making his first trip home in a year
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Missing Malaysia Airlines flight could have fallen victim to world's first 'cyber-hijack'
Flight MH370 could have fallen victim to the world’s first ‘‘cyber-hijack’’, with a British anti-terrorist expert saying a plane could be taken over using a mobile phone or USB stick.
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MH370 flew as low as 1,500m to avoid detection, says paper
As the search for the missing flight MH370 enters its 10th day with few clues as to its whereabouts, the New Straits Times said today the Boeing 777-200ER dropped 5,000 feet (1,500m) to evade commercial radar detection.
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Malaysia opposition leader Anwar admits MH370 pilot is his relative
Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim has admitted that Malaysia Airlines MH370 pilot Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah is related to his son's in-laws.
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What if the missing Malaysia plane is never found?
The plane must be somewhere. But the same can be said for Amelia Earhart's. Ten days after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared with 239 people aboard, an exhaustive international search has produced no sign of the Boeing 777, raising an unsettling question: What if the airplane is never found?
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Malaysia: Files Were Deleted From Flight Simulator
Malaysia's defense minister says files were recently deleted from the home flight simulator belonging to the pilot aboard the missing Malaysian jetliner. Hishammuddin Hussein told a news conference Wednesday that investigators are trying to retrieve the files. He also said that the pilot, Capt. Zaharie Ahmad Shah, is innocent until proven guilty of any wrongdoing.
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How Flight 370 Could Have Become a Zombie
Damage to the electronic nerve center might have left the airplane brain-dead but physically capable of flying for hours on autopilot until it ran out of fuel.
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Buddha's World of the Arts and Beyond: After Flight MH370 is Found, What Happens Next? (Op-Ed)By Geoffrey DellDate: 20 March 2014 Time: 07:53 PM ET
Showcase of my artistic talents plus, articles about conspiracy theories, news, health matters, and more!!
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Source: Flight 370's altitude dropped after sharp turn
As a growing number of airplanes scoured the southern Indian Ocean in the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, authorities released new details that paint a different picture of what may have happened in the plane's cockpit. Military radar tracking shows that the aircraft changed altitude after making a sharp turn over the South China Sea as it headed toward the Strait of Malacca, a source close to the investigation into the missing flight told CNN. The plane flew as low as 12,000 feet.
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Malaysia Prime Minister: missing flight MH370 crashed in Indian Ocean
More than two weeks after the plane disappeared during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, investigators have concluded that Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 crashed in the southern corridor of the Indian Ocean. Malaysia Prime Minister Najib Razak announced the news at a press conference called together after an emergency meeting was held for relatives of those aboard MH370.
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MH370’s Pilots Behaved As They Should in an Emergency, Not as Sinister Killers
New information shows the aircrew was trying to bring the Boeing 777 to safety, not commit mass murder as the Malaysian government implied.
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Malaysian Air 370: Passenger Cellphones Didn't Ring
Cellphones don't work like landlines; when you call them, the ringing happens on the network server, not on the other phone.
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MH370: How Do Insurers Put a Price on Life?
On Monday, when Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said that Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 “ended in the southern Indian Ocean,” it wasn’t simply a concession to the reality of the situation. It was a signal to the carrier’s insurance companies, and to lawyers around the world.
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How Much Will the Epic Search for Malaysia Flight 370 Cost?
There’s no easy way to put a price tag on the hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which has become an international obsession with a multinational cast of searchers in the days since its March 8 disappearance.
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Thai satellite detects 300 floating objects near search area for MH370
A Thai satellite has detected 300 floating objects in the Indian Ocean, about 200 kilometres from the international search area for the missing Malaysia Airlines MH370. Mr Anond Snidvongs, executive director of Geo Informatics and Space Technology Development Agency, said that Thaichote satellite or Thailand Earth Observation Satellite, has recorded the objects, ranging from two to 15 metres, about 200 kilometres south-west of where the ill-fated flight is thought to have come down.
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MH370: Hopes dashed as orange objects turn out to be fishing equipment
Potential leads on the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 keep coming. So do the setbacks and frustrations. Monday's search ended without finding anything significant, Australian officials said. Four orange objects spotted by search aircraft and earlier described as promising turned out be nothing more than old fishing gear, they said.
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MH370: cockpit transcript released
Malaysia says final words to air traffic control were 'Goodnight, Malaysian Three Seven Zero', contradicting an earlier version
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The sad state of Ocean garbage pollution
The sad corollary of the sad search for Malayasian Flight 370 is all the trash that the radar images have found in the southern ocean of our planet. One imagines admirals, heads bent, being embarrassed to answer the question, “What is that thing, sir?” “Packaging, son, for the things that make our global economy purr.”
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