-
+14 +1
Official claims debris find won't narrow search for MH370
The discovery of debris has raised hopes the mystery of missing Flight MH370 may be solved but authorities warn this is unlikely and the search goes on.
-
+1 +1
Debris believed to be from MH370 arrives in France for investigation
Aircraft debris that washed up on Reunion Island and may belong to MH370 arrives in France for investigators to study its origin.
-
+1 +1
Official: Latest debris found on island not part of Flight 370
An object found on an Indian Ocean island is not part of a plane door but a generic ladder that has nothing to do with missing Flight 370, a Malaysian officials said.
-
+2 +1
Is the 'plane window' thought to be from MH370 just a sewing machine?
Authorities have expressed doubts over claims that a piece of plastic found washed up on Reunion Island by a tourist on Tuesday is a window from the missing Malaysia Airlines plane.
-
+10 +1
‘This is where MH370 really went down’
MISSING Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 will be found in the Southern Indian Ocean at the opposite end of the current search area, according to drift analysis based on the discovery of a wing part on La Reunion Island.
-
+107 +1
Plane Debris is From Missing MH370
Part of aircraft wing found on Reunion island is from missing MH370 plane, Malaysian prime minister says.
-
+32 +1
Did MH370 pilot try to save plane?
SUSPICION has again fallen on MH370 captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah amid claims the wing part found on La Reunion Island shows signs of a “controlled crash”.
-
+17 +1
MH370 wreckage may have been spotted on sea bed
Australian authorities believe they may have spotted parts of ill-fated plane MH370 on the bottom of the southern Indian Ocean but won't be able to check them for several months.
-
+14 +1
Quit stalling
DESPITE two catastrophic air crashes (the disappearance of MH370 over the Indian ocean, and the shooting down of MH17 over Ukraine), 2014 was the safest year on record for civil aviation—with only one accident for every 4.4m flights. All told, 73 airline accidents occurred, including 12 involving fatalities. Some 641 passengers and crew died as a result. Even if the 298 lives lost over Ukraine are included (aircraft destroyed...
-
+20 +1
France: 'Certainty' that Reunion debris from MH370
A piece of debris that washed up on the shore of Reunion Island in July was part of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, the Paris prosecutor's office said Thursday, backing up a statement that Malaysia's Prime Minister made weeks ago.
-
+20 +1
Analysis Confirms Plane Debris Came From Malaysia Airlines Flight 370
French prosecutors said on Thursday that further analysis of a piece of an airplane wing that washed up on a remote Indian Ocean island had allowed investigators here to determine “with certitude” that it came from Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which disappeared in March 2014 with 239 people on board.
-
+41 +2
Sonar vehicle searching for MH370 sinks after hitting volcano in Indian Ocean
Vessel attached to Fugro Discovery lost while searching for Malaysia Airlines plane missing with 239 people on board
-
+39 +2
Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 was deliberately crashed by pilots, investigators to find
An Australian team probing the disappearance of the doomed airliner will state that it was intentionally downed by one of the airmen on board if they fail to find evidence of the wreckage within the next few weeks. The bombshell accusation will send shockwaves through the aviation industry, which has been working on the theory that MH370 became a ghost flight, flying on autopilot until its fuel ran out.
-
+24 +2
Possible MH370 Debris Found
Officials say that debris found on the coast of Mozambique likely belongs to missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370.
-
+36 +2
Two Pilots Say They Can Find MH370. All They Need Is $5 Million
Two years ago, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared somewhere over the Indian Ocean with 239 people on board. What then grew into humanity’s largest, most expensive search operation has also been among its most frustrating and beguiling. Investigators have found only one real bit of evidence, a wing flap that washed up on the shores of Réunion, near Madagascar. It was pretty useless. Because it spent nearly 500 days bobbing...
-
+39 +1
MH370 search: Mozambique debris 'almost certainly' from missing plane
The transport ministers of Australia and Malaysia say two plane parts found in Mozambique almost certainly came from missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370. The two pieces of debris were found separately by members of the public and were flown to Australia for analysis. Australian's Darren Chester said the finds were "consistent with drift modelling" of ocean currents. MH370 vanished in March 2014 with 239 people on board.
-
+38 +1
Russian Military Involved In Shooting Down Flight MH17, Researchers Say
Russian officials are trying to discredit a new report that implicates the Russian military in the shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines flight 17. Nearly two years ago, that attack in the skies over eastern Ukraine killed 298 people. The latest report comes from a U.K.-based organization called Bellingcat, which bills itself as a group of citizen investigative journalists. Much of their work is done by volunteers, who sift through open source information on the web, using social media...
-
+33 +1
MH370 Search to Be Suspended as New Evidence Hints the Flight Glided
The official search is nearly over while amateurs comb beaches to look for more debris. Already their efforts have turned up pieces of wing that show the plane didn't nosedive into the ocean. Officials from Malaysia, Australia, and China have come as close as they could to saying that the greatest mystery in modern aviation, the disappearance of Malaysia Flight 370, will remain unsolved. Meeting in Kuala Lumpur they said, “In the absence of new evidence [the three countries] have collectively decided to suspend the search upon completion of the 120,000 square kilometer (46,332 square mile) search area.”
-
+16 +1
MH370 Pilot Flew a Suicide Route on His Home Simulator Closely Matching Final Flight
The FBI recovered the data from a hard drive, but Malaysian authorities have not made the finding public. By Jeff Wise. (July 22, 2016 )
-
+2 +1
The pilot of doomed flight MH370 flew a 'suicide route' on his simulator closely matching his final flight
The captain of missing flight MH370 practiced crashing into the Indian Ocean on a simulated “suicide route” less than a month before his plane disappeared, police documents have revealed. Pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah used an elaborate home-made flight simulator to trial run paths out into the remote southern Indian Ocean before his plane vanished under very similar circumstances.
Submit a link
Start a discussion