BETWEEN
hope and certain misery the choice is predictable, but when all hope is dashed
and misery descends, the mind plays tricks even on the strongest spirit. For
those family members waiting for news of their loved ones on board the missing
Malaysian Airline (MAS) flight MH370, the terrible time of reckoning arrived on
Monday when they were personally informed that the aeroplane had plunged into
the desolate seas of the southern Indian Ocean. Predictably, too, the reaction
was a mixture of deep resignation by some and total denial by others. This
latter group, mainly families of the Chinese passengers, had good reason.
Losing an only son or daughter -- the one-child policy to be blamed for this
outcome -- is a heart break imaginable but not really comprehensible. That hope
lives eternal, so some says, makes denial inevitable.
Under the circumstances, willing the presumed dead to go on
living becomes that much easier and blame is a convenient currency. Putrajaya
could so easily have ignored the findings of failsafe scientific instruments
and allowed the waiting to go on -- knowing that tragedy is already made -- and
save itself the vitriol of despair flung at it. But what good would it do?
Debris seen, though not conclusively identified, points to that ultimate fate
for MH370: a watery grave so immense and deep. The science was but the nail in
the coffin. However, the profound pain of the families is made even deeper for
the 17 days of hope, no matter how slim. Even when the brain expects, the heart
will stubbornly reject, for closure is not born of conjecture, scientific
evidence notwithstanding. The mind will desist with its trickeries only when
credible proof is presented.
Not unnaturally, therefore, Putrajaya's announcement does not
in any way imply that the search will end. Already preparations to trawl the
part of the ocean identified has begun. Everything is being done to find the
aeroplane's black boxes, which will put all speculations to rest definitively.
This is the priority, because in less than two weeks, the signal from them
would have died and recovery made near impossible. Contemporary existence, so
much shaped by science, has made reliance on it complete, especially given the
dearth of hard facts surrounding the MH370 phenomenon. Conspiracy theories
abound but proof is not forthcoming. Tragic though it is, science has converged
with the meagre signs thus far, unconfirmed but still the best leads to hand.
Making the call to disclose the findings based on the last pings must have been
difficult, but more difficult and near impossible is the coming to terms for
the families of the 239 on board with the prime minister's fateful announcement
Read more: Fateful disclosure - Editorial - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/opinion/editorial/fateful-disclosure-1.532394?cache=03D163D03edding-pred-1.1176%2F%3FpFpentwage63Dp%3A%2Fhe3D03Dn63Frea-rti3D19.3D163D03edding-pred-1.1176%2F%3FpFpentwage63Dp%3A%2Fhe3D03Dn63Frea-rti3D19.111w5ii%2Fed-1.117%2F7.185006%2F7.185110%3Fkey%3DMalays%2F7.38915%2F7.38915%3Fpage%3D0%3Fpage%3D0%3Fkey%3DKuala+Lumpur#ixzz2x6ujKaRL
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