Missing Malaysian Airlines Flight: What We Know Now
After a week of investigating and searching, officials are still unable
to explain what happened to Malaysian Airlines Flight MH 370.
New revelations about the plane's path have led officials to refocus and
expand the search area, which has widened to nearly 5,000 miles wide.
As officials frantically search for the missing jetliner carrying 239
people, here's a rundown of what we know so far.
Investigation Reveals Plane was in Air Hours After Disappearing From Radar
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH 370 en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, China, disappeared from radar about 1:30 a.m. a week ago.
Investigators revealed today that the jetliner is now believed to have
been in the air for nearly seven hours after initially disappearing.
The plane’s transponder, which reports its location and altitude - along
with a data reporting system - were shut down within minutes of each
other before the plane changed course. According to experts, the fact
that the systems were shut down separately means a catastrophic event is
unlikely because both systems would have failed at the same time.
After disappearing from radar the plane turned back towards Malaysia,
where military radar picked up the plane’s signal but did not realize it
was a passenger jet until days later. The plane was tracked crossing
Peninsular Malaysia before crossing the Strait of Malacca.
Although the transponder was turned off, the plane was “pinging” a
satellite for hours after it disappeared from radar. As a result,
officials revealed the last time the satellite received data from the
plane was 8:11 a.m., about seven hours and 31 minutes after the plane
took off. Currently officials have not been able to track the plane’s
location with these same “pings.”
Officials refused to confirm that the plane was hijacked and said “all possibilities” were being investigated.
The Malaysian government has come under fire for not sharing information
sooner. The government has turned down multiple offers of help from
Interpol a source told ABC News.
The Chinese government's Xinhua News Agency said the Malaysian
information was "painfully belated," on Saturday. A majority of
passengers on the missing flight were Chinese.
The Pilots
A week after the flight disappeared, police finally visited the homes of
the pilots for Flight MH 370. They did not release any findings to
reporters.
The missing plane was piloted by Capt. Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, and his
co-pilot or first officer on the flight was Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27. appeared to raise any red flags during the initial investigation.
Shah, a married father with three grown children, joined Malaysian
Airlines in 1981 and has more than 18,000 hours of experience in the
air.
Hamid had been flying with Malaysian Airlines since 2007 and has more than 2,000 hours in the air.
Earlier this week ABC News visited the mosque where Hamid prays on
Fridays when he is not flying. Imam Ahmad Sharafi Ali Asrah
characterized Hamid as a good man. The mosque prayed for him and his
family.
The Search
The new information about the plane’s flight path has meant the search
efforts have been rerouted from the South China Sea to the Indian Ocean.
The hours between the plane’s disappearance from radar and its final
data transmission to a satellite means officials are left to search a
staggeringly large area, around 5,000 miles from Kazakhstan to the south
Indian Ocean.
More than 40 ships and 39 aircraft from 12 countries are searching for
signs of the plane in the water but have not found any debris yet.
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