In early March 2014, the world was
captivated in a way never seen before by the news of a missing Malaysian
Airlines flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, MH370. The last voice contact
with the flight crew was early morning 8th March somewhere over the South China
Sea, just over an hour after take-off. Soon after the plane disappeared from
Malaysian Air traffic Control radars, but was tracked shortly after flying over
the Malay Peninsula, and tracking across the Andaman Sea.
MH370 was a Boeing 777-200ER, which
had 227 passengers and 15 crew members aboard that night. This disappearance of
the aircraft has led to one of the largest and longest searches in history for
the aircraft, which is still going on today in the Southern Indian Ocean, the
most probable place authorities believe that plane went down.
MH370 is not the only aviation
mystery. There have been a long line of aviation mysteries, many which still
have not been solved today. One of the most famous cases that have attracted a
lot of speculation was flight 19, a group of 5 TBM Avenger torpedo bombers that
disappeared over the Bermuda Triangle in 1945. A PBM Mariner flying boat that
went searching for the lost planes also disappeared.
Charismatic Amelia Earhart and her
navigator Fred Noonan, mysteriously disappeared in the Pacific while on a round
the world flight in a twin engine Lockheed Electra 10E. In 1956, a fully
nuclear armed B-47 Stratojet disappeared over the Mediterranean Sea and was
lost without a trace. In 1962, a Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation flight
from Travis Air Force Base in California to Saigon disappeared without a trace
after a mid-air refuelling over Guam. In 1979, a Boeing 707-323C transporting
valuable paintings disappeared mid-flight between Tokyo and Rio de Janerio and
was never found.
However, some aircraft have
disappeared by design. In 2003, a Boeing 727-223 was stolen in Angola from the
airport, took off and has never been seen again.
All the above cases have not been
solved and led to speculation and conspiracy theories ranging from the
plausible to the extra-terrestrial explanations.
Yet time has allowed similar cases
to be solved when someone stumbles across wreckage or other artifacts from
these besieged flights. Such a case included a South American Airways Star Dust
aircraft that disappeared in 1947. It took 50 years to solve this mystery when
glacial ice in the Andes melted, exposing the aircraft wreckage. More recently,
the remains of Air France Flight 447, were only found two years after it
disappeared.
However the search area for the
ill-fated MH370 is hundreds of times more expansive than flight 447.
As the events of March 2014 panned
out, several things became clear.
The first thing exposed by the MH370
tragedy was the ad hoc haphazardness of the Malaysian Government. The early
responses of the government were heavily criticized for uncoordinated and
sometimes contradictory approach to the disaster. The chief spokesman for the
Malaysian Government Defence Minister and acting Transport Minister Hishamuddin
Hussein was criticized for his smugness, evasiveness, sometimes condescending
attitude, and delay in providing information to the families of MH370
passengers and public.
It took Malaysia’s Prime Minister
Najib Razak a week before he appeared on television after the plane vanished.
This delay made Malaysia appear very unprofessional to people who were not
familiar with the political culture of Malaysia.
The families and relatives of the
missing were particularly critical of the search operation. Critical time was
lost searching for flight MH370 in the South China Sea. Voice370 representing
the families of the passengers accused the Malaysian Government of a cover-up.
The families and relatives of the passengers, mainly Chinese nationals, were
angered by the coarseness of an English language text message “we have to
assume beyond all reasonable doubt that MH370 has been lost and all those on
board haven’t survived”. This led to Chinese protests outside the Malaysian
Embassy in Beijing.
After more than a year since the
disappearance of flight MH370, criticism still persists about Malaysian
Airlines safety issues which were found wanting. Malaysian Airlines has
performed very poorly financially, since the disappearance of MH370, the
shooting down of MH17, and boycotts by Chinese that brought a reported 50% drop
in tourists compared to the previous year.
The Malaysian Government’s poor
response to the MH370 disappearance showed up both the lack of transparency and
the dismal state of the Malaysian media that has been shackled for years.
Ministers and public officials were not used to the scrutiny the international
media put them under.
The second issue was the poor
coordination between civil and military authorities. This was not unique to
Malaysia, the same problem purportedly occurred during the 911 terrorist
attacks in the United States in 2001. Although Flight MH370 was detected by
Malaysian military radar crossing the Malay Peninsula soon after the final
voice communication to Kuala Lumpur Air Traffic Control, it took civil
authorities a number of days before they moved the search from the South China
Sea to the Andaman Sea and Indian Ocean. Vietnam also expressed concerns that Malaysia
was not forthcoming with new information and cooperative.
This leads onto the third issue of
international defence capabilities and cooperation, which appear very poor out
of this disaster. MH370 must have come up as a radar signature across Vietnam,
Thailand, and Indonesia. According to reports, it was only after MH370 had
disappeared 9 days that the Thais informed the Malaysians that they had picked
up an unidentified flight crossing the Malay Peninsula. According to Indonesian
authorities no unidentified flight was ever picked up on radar, which hints
that either the system wasn’t being used or MH370 very skilfully flew along the
boundaries of the radar detection area of Indonesia.
This raises questions about actual
ASEAN military surveillance capabilities.
Given that military authorities may
be hesitant to disclose the extent of their respective early warning radar
systems, The Mail suggests
that air defences may not be what they are supposed to be.
The delay in sharing vital
information with Malaysia shows the poor state of defence cooperation within
the region.
The fact that a large modern
airliner could just disappear has been met with much disbelief, leading to a
number of conspiracy theories.
Some claim that the aircraft was
hijacked by North Korea over the sea for the new technologies that Boeing 777
has incorporated within the plane. A US science writer Jeff Wise, who regularly
appears on CNN postulated that the aircraft flew north rather than south into
the Indian Ocean and landed in Kazakhstan. Other theories put forward include
the United States shot down the plane to prevent a drone shot down by the
Taliban over Afghanistan with secret technology in the cargo bay, didn’t get
into the hands of the Chinese. A variation on this theory is that the aircraft
was forcibly taken to a US base on the Indian Ocean Island of Diego Garcia,
where the crew and passengers are captives.
Conspiracy theorists put weight on
the fact that 20 employees of a semi-conductor company Freescale Semiconductor
developing components for hi-tech military weapons and navigation systems were
on board MH370. Their disappearance according to some could have been the result of stealth
technology this group had been working on. Alternatively others have
proposed that the disappearance of
these engineers allowed a member of the Rothschild family to secure sole
ownership of an important patent.
Still more theories speculate the
plane’s disappearance was about a life insurance scam, the plane was captured
and exchanged for MH17 which was shot down over the Ukraine, later in August
2014, the plane was cyber-jacked electronically, and the plane was abducted by
aliens.
Even though fragments of MH370 found
on Reunion Island and have been confirmed as parts of MH370, there are some who
claim that the pieces are fake, and one of the above conspiracy theories hold.
Debris found washed up on a beach
along the East Coast of Thailand last month was suspected of being parts of
MH370, until this was discounted by aviation authorities in Bangkok.
The initial suspicion on the
disappearance of MH370 was related to two passengers using false passports.
This indicated a possible hijacking. The turn flight MH370 made over the South
China Sea and around Indonesian territory appeared to support this deliberate
act. News breaking out that the co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid had allowed
passengers into the cockpit during a previous flight also made this theory
appear plausible.
The phone call Fariq was
reported to have tried to make over Penang even adds more weight to
the MH370 disappearance being a deliberate act. However upon investigation of
all the passengers and crew, no links to terrorism was ever made with anybody
on the flight. This only exposed a lapse in security as the two passports of
the passengers involved where actually on the Interpol database, but not
checked by Malaysian Immigration.
This doesn’t count out a disturbed
member of the crew having a ‘death-wish’ and using the flight to commit
suicide. The captain could have locked the co-pilot out of the cockpit and
proceeded down to the Southern Indian Ocean and take the whole plane to a deep
ocean grave. This scenario happened on a Silk Air flight some years ago where
the captain lost his savings on the stock-market and committed suicide, and
with Egypt Air flight 990 where the co-pilot committed suicide by diving the
plane straight into the sea.
The latest explanation by the
Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATAC) suggests a power failure, which
probably disabled avionic systems where the plane would have flown on
auto-pilot until fuel was exhausted, where it would turn into a spiral nose
dive going straight into the Southern Indian Ocean. The rebooting of the ACARS
system which transmits engine data to the ground suggests a power failure. The
lithium batteries in the cargo hold could have been a source of that fire which
disabled electronic systems, vital to control and manage a sophisticated
aircraft like a Boeing 777. Lithium batteries have caused fires on aircraft
before. This is what happened to a South African Airways flight in 1987.
The crew and passengers may have
been disabled through hypoxia, where the plane flew on autopilot. This could
have been a similar scenario to the Helios Airlines Flight 522 crash in 2005,
where two jets were scrambled and the pilots saw all the passengers
incapacitated, when the flight eventually crashed after it ran out of fuel.
However this explanation doesn’t explain the apparent deliberate flight around Aceh, where MH370 avoided Indonesian radar. This would have to be a carefully planned part of the flight. This scenario points to a purposeful act, and MH370 could have been a hijacking gone wrong, something like Ethiopia Airways Flight 961, where the plane ran out of fuel and crashed into the sea in 1996.
However this explanation doesn’t explain the apparent deliberate flight around Aceh, where MH370 avoided Indonesian radar. This would have to be a carefully planned part of the flight. This scenario points to a purposeful act, and MH370 could have been a hijacking gone wrong, something like Ethiopia Airways Flight 961, where the plane ran out of fuel and crashed into the sea in 1996.
Although it was confirmed pieces of
wreckage washed up on Reunion Island where part of MH370, what happened and the
whereabouts of the fuselage and remains of the passengers and crew still remain
a mystery. The Australian Transport
Safety Bureau’s Chief Commissioner Martin Dolan said that the search
effort will now have to retrace some previously searched locations due to the
complexity of the ocean surface and possibility the wreckage may have been
missed. The search has been extremely hazardous resulting in a loss of the deep
water sonar which hit an underwater volcano and sank to the bottom of the ocean
a few weeks ago.
A French team is currently
developing another theory of what happened to flight MH370 based upon the piece
of wreckage washed up on Reunion Island, which was found in an unexpected
location in relation to the targeted search area. Another report expected to be
released by the Malaysian Government on the 2nd anniversary of the plane’s
disappearance may incorporate this theory in the report.
The shocking truth about MH370 is
that we don’t really know what happened on that night of 8th March 2014, how
the flight ended, and what became of the passengers and aircraft. Everything
the authorities have said is pure speculation. The black box data recorder
holds all the secrets to the doomed flight. This needs to be recovered before
the truth can be known with certainty.
Even with all the technology we have
today, the Earth is larger than we think. Satellite photography, the US ability
to identify any missile launch on the face of the Earth, aviation procedures
and protocols, and defence surveillance around the globe failed to notice and
find a rogue aircraft, even post 911.
Ideas are needed and resources
allocated to help prevent this scenario ever happening again. However almost
two years after the disappearance of MH370, nothing has been put in place to
enable the tracking of rogue aircraft, should they deviate from flight plans and
procedures.
The solutions exist and are in
practice. Over the vast region of Hudson Bay, radar blind spots are covered by
approximations using flight plans, GPS, and broadcasts under an Automatic Dependent
Surveillance – Broadcast (ADSB) system. Such systems are not
operating within South-East Asia and Indian Ocean. The MH370 tragedy indicates
that the skies over the
region are not being watched closely at all. This lack of diligent
surveillance has made the search for MH370 the most costly in history.
With the present search only planned
to continue until June this year, the shocking truth about MH370 is that the
relatives and loved ones of the people on MH370 may not get closure for two or
three generations to come.
Authorities are now beginning to
return to some of the original hypothesized theories to explore the MH370
disappearance further, such as a flame out or rogue pilot scenario similar to
the Andreas Lubitz case where he deliberately crashed a Germanwings Airbus
A320-211 into the French Alps. The questions about whether
the pilot deliberately turned off the transponder over the South
China Sea will probably be open to debate once again.
The mystery of MH370 may only be
finally put to rest in the later part of this century, and this may only happen
by accident.
Murray Hunter
Murray Hunter has been
involved in Asia-Pacific business for the last 30 years as an entrepreneur,
consultant, academic, and researcher. Murray is now an associate professor at the
University Malaysia Perlis
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