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[Dunia]
Maklumat Rasmi KEHILANGAN MH370 [Hari ke X]
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thanks TT for Good Thread ni...
Hanya maklumat sahih aje lam ni...
Teruskan berdoa selagi masih ada harapan.. |
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Bagus takde merapu kat sini...fakta sahaja.. |
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Three things we learned from: Missing flight MH370
KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 — News that Malaysia Airlines (MAS) flight MH370 “disappeared” broke as we started work on Saturday morning around seven.
Since then, our entire focus has been on the missing MH370. My colleagues are covering press conferences, scouring foreign news sources, working the phones and two of them are actually in Vietnam trying to find out more about search and rescue operations.
Today is the third day we are doing this and while it has been frustrating trying to piece together the disparate pieces of information, it must be a thousand times more painful for the families of the missing passengers.
For them, this is not about a story. It is about finding out what happened to the ones they cherish.
So what have we learned so far:
1. Malaysia has friends. Each time it is announced that yet another country has sent airplanes or ships to join in the search and rescue operations, you cannot help but feel touched. Vietnam, China, Thailand, Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines, Australia and the United States of America. Thank you all.
2. The staff of MAS are pretty amazing. There has been quite a lot of MAS bashing going on in social media, but the hardest part of the job for many of the staff is dealing with the families of missing passengers.
These are emotional times and there has been instances staff were abused verbally and physically. And yet 93 of them including Firefly CEO Ignatius Ong — all Mandarin-speaking — volunteered to fly to Beijing to help with families of passengers over there. Yes, volunteered.
3. We stand together. In empathy with all the families out there struggling with their grief. Hoping for good news. Any news.
The Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak and his wife Datin Seri Paduka Rosmah Mansor have visited the families and offered support. And Defence Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein even calmed down some distraught family members today when things got a little
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Sedihnya...'hilang' sekaligus mereka yg berbakat & berpengalaman serta ahli kluarga mereka..
Chinese artists from Flight MH370 and their art( chinadaily.com.cn )Updated: 2014-03-10 12:07:38Comments[url=]Print[/url][url=]Mail[/url][url=]Large[/url][url=]Medium[/url][url=]Small[/url]
| Audience visit an exhibition of works of 24 Chinese painters and calligraphers in KualaLumpur, Malaysia, March 4, 2014. The exhibition is held here from March 4 to March 6. [Photo/Xinhua] |
Passengers on board Flight MH370 included a group of 30 Chinese artists, family members andart employees who had attended a three-day painting and calligraphy exhibition where the artists'work was displayed. Ma Yong'an, chairman of the Beijing-based China Calligraphy Artists Association, which co- organized the event in Kuala Lumpur, told China Daily that 13 people from the group of artistsare members of the association. One of the members was the association's Vice-ChairmanMeng Gaosheng, the group's leader. The exhibition featured a lineup of artists from around China who demonstrated their proficiencyin calligraphy, oil paintings and ink art. Following are profiles of some of the artists on board Flight MH370.
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Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (CNN) -- The mysteries surrounding the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, and the true identities of some of its passengers, are as deep as the southeast Asian waters where multinational search teams are searching for the jet.
Navies from two of Malaysia's neighbors were pursuing new leads as Sunday turned into Monday in the region.
Vietnam's navy has spotted a floating object about 80 kilometers (50 miles) southwest of Vietnam's Tho Chu Island, which is off the country's southwest coast in the Gulf of Thailand, Vietnam National Search and Rescue Committee spokesman Hung Nguyen told CNN.
The object was spotted by a Vietnamese navy rescue aircraft at about 7:30 a.m. ET Sunday (6:30 p.m. local time). Because of the dark, the navy aircraft could not get close enough to identify the floating object and was recalled to base. Three search and rescue boats have since been deployed to that location.
Meanwhile, Thailand's navy is shifting its focus in the search away from the Gulf of Thailand and the South China Sea, Thai Navy Rear Adm. Karn Dee-ubon told CNN on Sunday. The shift came at the request of the Malaysians, who are looking into possibilities the plane turned around and could have gone down in the Andaman Sea, near Thailand's border, Karn said.
The Andaman Sea lies to the west of a narrow strip of Thailand that ends in the Malaysian Peninsula, while the Gulf of Thailand lies to the east of that Thai isthmus.
One promising lead has turned out to be a dead end. A "strange object" spotted by a Singaporean search plane late Sunday afternoon is not debris from the missing jetliner, a U.S. official familiar with the issue told CNN on Sunday.
A U.S. reconnaissance plane "thought it saw something like debris, but it was a false alarm," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity
By the end of the day Sunday, more than 40 planes and more than two dozen ships from several countries were involved in the search. Two reconnaissance aircraft from Australia and one plane and five sea vessels from Indonesia were the latest additions, Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, the director general of civil aviation in Malaysia, told reporters Sunday. In addition, the Chinese navy dispatched a frigate and an amphibious landing ship, according to an online post by China's navy.
Those reinforcements join the rescue teams already scouring the South China Sea, near the Gulf of Thailand, for any sign of where the flight, operated by Malaysia's flagship airline, might have gone down, Malaysian authorities said.
The area in focus for most of the search, about 90 miles south of Tho Chu Island, is where a Vietnamese plane reportedly spotted oil slicks that stretched between 6 and 9 miles.
"I can confirm that there was an oil slick, no debris. But what we are doing now, I was told that the Vietnamese aircrafts are on the site right now to verify what actually is it on the surface of those waters," said acting Malaysian Transportation Minister Hishammuddin bin Tun Hussein.
Big questions far outweigh the few fragments of information that have emerged about the plane's disappearance:
What happened to the plane? Why was no distress signal issued? Who exactly was aboard?
The flight may have changed course and turned back toward Kuala Lumpur, Malaysian military officials said at a news conference Sunday.
But the pilot appears to have given no signal to authorities that he was turning around, the officials said, attributing the change of course to indications from radar data.
As the search continues, the agonizing wait goes on for relatives of the 227 passengers and 12 crew members on board the plane. Video from Reuters showed Malaysia Airlines personnel in Beijing, where Flight 370 was headed, helping family members apply for expedited passports so they could fly to Kuala Lumpur early this week.
Among the passengers, 154 people were from China or Taiwan; 38 Malaysians, five Indian nationals and three U.S. citizens. Five of the passengers were younger than 5 years old.
Malaysia Airlines said Monday that initial financial assistance has been given out to all passengers' families "over and above their basic needs." Each family has also been assigned at least one caregiver.
"Malaysia Airlines' primary focus at this point in time is to care for the families. This means providing them with timely information, travel facilities, accommodation, meals, medical and emotional support," the airline said in a statement.
Stolen passports
Interpol tweeted Sunday that it is "examining additional suspect #passports in connection" with the missing flight.
Earlier, the international law enforcement agency said at least two passports -- one Austrian and one Italian -- recorded in its stolen and lost travel documents database were used by passengers onboard the flight. The passports were added to the database after being stolen in separate incidents over the past two years, Interpol said.
Italy and Austria have said that none of their citizens were onboard the plane.
"No checks of the stolen Austrian and Italian passports were made by any country between the time they were entered into INTERPOL's database and the departure of flight MH 370. At this time, INTERPOL is therefore unable to determine on how many other occasions these passports were used to board flights or cross borders," the agency said in a Sunday statement.
It added that passengers were able to board planes more than a billion times last year without having their passports screened by Interpol's databases.
The Italian man whose passport was allegedly used, Luigi Maraldi, contacted the Italian consulate in Phuket, Thailand, on Saturday, after receiving a call from his parents, Italian Consul Franco Cavaliere told CNN on Sunday.
Maraldi told Reuters he was inundated with phone calls, texts and social media inquiries asking if he was alive and well. He soon discovered that he was the subject of stories about the missing plane.
Maraldi is staying on Phuket Island as a tourist, and his passport disappeared in July 2013, Cavaliere said. Maraldi told Reuters he got a new passport after his old one was stolen.
"Whilst it is too soon to speculate about any connection between these stolen passports and the missing plane, it is clearly of great concern that any passenger was able to board an international flight using a stolen passport listed in INTERPOL's databases," said Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble in a statement.
The two passengers who used the passports in question appear to have bought their tickets together.
The tickets were bought from China Southern Airlines at identical prices, paid in Thailand's baht currency, according to China's official e-ticket verification system Travelsky. The ticket numbers are contiguous, which indicates the tickets were issued together.
The two tickets booked with China Southern Airlines both start in Kuala Lumpur, fly to Beijing, and then onward to Amsterdam. The Italian passport's ticket continues to Copenhagen, the Austrian's to Frankfurt.
Authorities say they are investigating the identities of some of those onboard who appear to have issues with their passports.
"I've seen these reports about the passports. We're looking into that, but we don't have anything to confirm at this point," U.S. deputy national security adviser Tony Blinken told CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday. "The reports certainly raise questions and concerns, and that's exactly why we're looking into them. But right now, it would be premature to speculate," he said.
Terrorism concerns
A fuller picture of what happened may not become available until searchers find the plane and its flight data recorder.
"We have not been able to locate anything, see anything," Rahman told reporters Sunday.
The passport mystery raised concerns about the possibility of terrorism, but officials cautioned that it was still too early to arrive at any conclusions.
Malaysian authorities have been in contact with counterterrorism organizations about possible passport issues, acting Transportation Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said Sunday.
He didn't specify how many potential passport issues there were, saying authorities are looking at the whole passenger manifest.
Additionally, no inquiry was made by Malaysia Airlines to determine if any passengers on the flight were traveling on stolen passports, he said. Many airlines do not check the database, he said.
Five passengers ended up not boarding the aircraft. Their bags were removed and were not onboard the jet when it disappeared, Hussein said.
A U.S. intelligence official said that no link to terrorism had been discovered so far, but that authorities were still investigating.
Another possible explanation for the use of the stolen passports is illegal immigration.
There are previous cases of illegal immigrants using fake passports to try to enter Western countries. And Southeast Asia is known to be a booming market for stolen passports.
Disappearing during cruise
There is a precedent for a modern jetliner to fall from the sky while "in the cruise" and lie hidden for months, according to CNN aviation correspondent Richard Quest.
On June 1, 2009, Air France Flight 447 was en route from Rio De Janeiro to Paris when communications ended suddenly from the Airbus A330, another state-of-the-art aircraft.
It took four searches over the course of nearly two years to locate the bulk of flight 447's wreckage and the majority of the 228 bodies in a mountain range deep under the ocean. It took even longer to find the cause of the disaster.
In May 2011, the aircraft's voice recorder and flight data recorder were recovered from the ocean floor after an extensive search using miniature submersible vehicles.
It was not until July 2012 that investigators published their report, which blamed the crash on a series of errors by the pilots and a failure to react effectively to technical problems.
The missing Malaysia Airlines plane had suffered damage in the past, airline CEO Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said Sunday. The aircraft had a clipped wing tip, but Boeing repaired it, and the jet was safe to fly, Yahya said.
The National Transportation Safety Board announced late Saturday that a team of its investigators was en route to Asia to help with the investigation, the agency said.
If all those on board Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 are found to have died, it will rank as the deadliest airline disaster since November 12, 2001, when American Airlines Flight 587 crashed into a New York neighborhood, killing all 260 people on board and five more on the ground.
The deadliest commercial air crash ever involving a single plane occurred almost 30 years ago on August 12, 1985, in the mountains of central Japan. A total of 520 people were killed when Japan Airlines Flight 123 -- a Boeing 747 -- crashed not long after takeoff from Tokyo. Four people survived. |
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Missing Malaysia Airlines plane: KLIA security meets international standards: Official
Kuala Lumpur International Airport's security meets strict international standards, a Malaysian official said on Monday amid reports of security lapses at the airport.
Pressed for answers on how two men with Asian features could have boarded the ill-fated Malaysia Airlines MH370 with European passports, Department of Civil Aviation director-general Azharuddin Abdul Rahman said he was waiting for a report by security investigators on this matter.
Malaysia's Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi on Sunday said the two passengers who used stolen European passports were of Asian appearance, criticising border officials who let them through.
"I am still perturbed. Can't these immigration officials think? Italian and Austrian but with Asian faces," he was quoted by state news agency Bernama as saying late on Sunday.
Mr Azharuddin declined to comment on whether there is heightened security in Malaysia's airport but maintained that security had been strict.
"We have a national civil aviation security programme we have to comply with. As DCA, we have done our audits on KLIA, following standards by transport security administration of the US and Australia," said Mr Azharuddin.
On the possibility of a hijack, he said: "This is not discounted. We're looking at every aspect of what could have happened to the aircraft."
Malaysia Airlines had removed all unaccompanied baggage on flight MH370 before it took off on Saturday morning, adhering to international aviation protocols, he said.
"Every check-in baggage has a tag on the boarding pass. This was done to make sure the correct bags were removed from the aircraft," he told a press conference as the search for the missing plane entered its third day.
He said reports that Vietnamese searchers found a part that looks like the inner part of an aircraft door have not been officially verified by the Vietnamese government.
He said the search teams had also dispatched sea craft to investigate debris spotted by air crews on Sunday.
"Parts that look like an airplane's tail but when we dispatched craft to the area made known to us, it was logs tied together that look like pontoons," Mr Azharuddin said.
He said searches were also still being carried out in the Strait of Malacca on the possibility of the aircraft making an air turn back after taking off from KLIA.
Oil samples from the South China Sea recovered by Malaysian Maritime Agency Agency were also being studied by the Chemistry Department, with no time given on when the analyses would be finished.
Search operations are still ongoing and currently involves 34 aircraft, 40 ships, and more than 100 men in operations that has passed 60 hours now.
Air search is being done from 7am to 7pm daily while sea-borne searches are conducted round the clock.
Flight MH370 to Beijng lost contact with Subang Air Traffic Control 50 minutes after departing KLIA at 12.41am on Saturday.
It was due to land in Beijing at 6.30am, and had enough fuel to fly till 8.30am. The plane did not issue a distress signal nor was there bad weather when it disappeared.
The flight was carrying a total number of 239 people - comprising 227 passengers (including 2 infants) and 12 crew members.
Passengers from 14 nations and Taiwan were on board, the majority being Chinese nationals and Malaysians. No Singaporean was on board.
Flight MH370 was operated on a Boeing 777-200 aircraft, a codeshare with China Southern Airlines.
Malaysia said the search would go on round the clock until a decision is made to call it off.
On Chinese family members wishing to come to Kuala Lumpur to be closer to investigations, MAS CEO Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said up to five next of kin of each passenger will be flown in and put up in KL hotels.
The first of the families from China have already arrived in KL on Monday morning.
Local Malaysian families are being housed in the Everly Hotel in Putrajaya, half an hour from KLIA.
[email protected] |
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NAT_11 posted on 10-3-2014 11:44 AM
Yes, I hope so.
Harap takda speko di sini.
Saya harap, masok sini boleh dapat the latest OFFICIA ...
saya setuju... org nk taw perkembangan... nyh sebuk berbalah... mcm kanak2 tadika... |
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Missing Malaysia Airlines plane: French accident board offers help recovering jet
PARIS (REUTERS) - France's air accident board, which led a three-year investigation into the 2009 loss of an Air France jet in the Atlantic, has offered to help Malaysia and Vietnam with the recovery of a missing Malaysia Airlines plane.
"We have communicated to Malaysian and Vietnamese authorities that we are ready to assist with the underwater search operations or recovery of wreckage," a spokesman for the Paris-based BEA accident investigation branch said on Sunday.
The United States (US) National Transportation Safety Board has also offered to help with the recovery of the Boeing 777, which vanished en route to China with 239 people on board and is presumed to have crashed. So far no confirmed trace of the plane has been found, more than 48 hours after it disappeared.
Air France Flight 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris vanished in a storm on June 1, 2009, triggering an international hunt for wreckage and black boxes, in a case that bears similarities to the disappearance of the Malaysian jet. |
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alinone78 posted on 10-3-2014 01:28 PM
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/03/0 ... -airliner-analysis/
Quest: Malaysia Airlines jet was 'at saf ...
sejak bila richard quest jadi aviation expert?...
selalu dok layan quest means business dgn cnn traveller..
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fairluck posted on 10-3-2014 02:21 PM
sejak bila richard quest jadi aviation expert?...
selalu dok layan quest means business dgn cnn t ...
Serpihan didakwa pintu pesawat adalah seikat kayu
SEPANG 10 Mac - Jabatan Penerbangan Awam (DCA) memberitahu, objek didakwa serpihan pintu pesawat yang dikesan pasukan mencari dan menyelamat Vietnam, adalah seikat kayu yang kelihatan seperti tukun tiruan.
Ketua Pengarah DCA, Datuk Azharuddin Abdul Rahman berkata, pihaknya sudah menghubungi pihak berkuasa Vietnam dan mereka mengesahkan tiada penemuan serpihan pesawat.
* utusan online.
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news cmnilah masyarakat nak.. Last edited by PulutDereyan on 10-3-2014 02:51 PM
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China sends 9 ships and 4 helicopters to join search
BEIJING, March 10 (Xinhuanet) -- The Chinese government has dispatched nine ships and four helicopters to join the search and rescue. More are likely to follow.
A massive search and rescue mission in full swing. At least nine ships are on the move. A vessel from China’s shipping giant COSCO arrived Sunday morning, the first from China. But so far, the hunt has yielded nothing. A ship from the Chinese Coast Guard joined the mission Sunday noon.
"We now have four yachts, two for search and two for rescue," said Luo Jianxiong, Commander of China Coast Guard Boat 3411.
A team of experts in Beijing is closely monitoring the waters to provide information for the search efforts.
"People aboard are divided into six different teams, including searching, monitoring, medical support and others. We have especially strengthened the search on the sea," said Zhang Chunru, Shift foreman of China Coast Guard Command Center.
The Chinese navy has dispatched four ships, with at least 100 rescuers and a medical team on board. Two helicopters with rescue equipment were deployed Sunday afternoon And two more are on the way. As the mystery of the missing plane deepens, the search intensifies.
(Source: CNTV.cn)
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Hijacking not ruled out in missing Malaysian jet - chief investigator
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Hijacking could not be ruled out and all possibilities were being investigated into why a Malaysia Airlines jet carrying 239 people went missing enroute from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, the chief Malaysian investigator said on Monday. The investigator said Vietnamese authorities have not confirmed sighting any debris from the plane.
Flight MH370 disappeared early Saturday about an hour into its flight from Kuala Lumpur after climbing to a cruising altitude of 35,000 feet (10,670 metres).
(Reporting by Michael Perry)
-Reuters-
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Namirul_returns posted on 10-3-2014 02:39 PM
Hijacking not ruled out in missing Malaysian jet - chief investigator
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Hi ...
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Finally ada jgk thread utk FAKTA and LATEST UPDATE je pasal MH370 ni. Penat dah baca benda2 mengarut troll sana sini kat thread2 sblm ni. Nak cari update pun x jmp. Thanks TT bukak benang ni. |
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Note: Thread has been banned by manager
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man saw white light [url=home.php?mod=space&uid=1968553]@ ketereh[/url]
KELANTAN: A businessman in Ketereh claimed that he saw a bright white light, believed to be of an aircraft, descending at high speed towards the South China Sea about 1.45am on the day flight MH370 went missing.
Alif Fathi Abdul Hadi, 29, told the New Straits Times what he saw after lodging a report with the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) in Tok Bali earlier today.
Alif said he was in the compound of his home when he saw the bright white light, which he described as similar to the ones used by airplanes during night flights.
"I was walking towards my back door when I caught a glimpse of the white light.
"It was moving towards the sea, towards Bachok area, which was unusual.
"Usually, aircrafts that fly over here have their usual route pattern, but this one went completely towards the other way," he said.
Alif said he watched the light's movement for about five minutes, before realising that it was descending.
However, he said he was not sure that it was an airplane as he only saw the light.
He said there was no blinking red light.
"I did not think much about it, and went to sleep.
"Only the next day, when I heard the news on the radio, I thought that the light I saw could be from the aircraft's.
"After discussing with my family members, they advised me to lodge a report, and I hope this information can be of any help," he said.
Alif was accompanied by his uncle Rosman Ishak, 55, when he lodged the report.
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Sample from an oil slick found by the Malaysian maritime agency 20 nautical miles away from the last known position of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. – Picture courtesy of Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency, March 10, 2014.
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MH370 tak meletup di udara
KUALA LUMPUR: Teori pesawat #MH370 itu meletup di udara ditolak selepas akhbar The New York Times memetik pegawai kerajaan Amerika Syarikat (AS) hari ini.
Pegawai itu dipetik sebagai berkata data pemantauan awal yang diperiksa Pentagon mencadangkan #MH370 tidak meletup di Laut China Selatan berdasarkan sistem pemantauannya di seluruh dunia.
Sementara itu, episod kehilangan #MH370 milik Malaysia Airlines (MAS) kini tertumpu kepada dua penumpang misteri yang menaiki pesawat itu menggunakan pasport palsu milik warganegara Itali dan Austria.
Ketika anggota keluarga penumpang semakin resah apabila tiada penemuan
selepas lebih daripada 48 jam, misteri dua penumpang itu menimbulkan pelbagai teori yang mengaitkan mereka dengan kehilangan pesawat MH370.
Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, ketika mengulas kemungkinan terdapat unsur ancaman pengganas, berkata kerajaan tidak akan membuat sebarang kesimpulan tanpa bukti kukuh.
"Sekarang tak ada bukti kukuh, macam-macam teori melayang. Kita terpaksa mencari semua kemungkinan petunjuk dan kena siasat sebelum membuat kesimpulan kukuh," kata Najib selepas merasmikan Program Penyatuan Nasional 2014 di sini.
Sementara itu, Ketua Pengarah Jabatan Penerbangan Awam Malaysia (DCA) Datuk Azaharuddin Abdul Rahman berkata pihaknya menyiasat pelbagai aspek, termasuk sama ada pesawat itu dirampas, namun tidak dapat mengesahkannya selagi #MH370 belum dijumpai.
Pesawat Boeing 777-200 itu dilapor hilang daripada radar kira-kira dua jam selepas berlepas dari Lapangan Terbang Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur (KLIA) pada 12.41 pagi menuju Beijing, China. Ia sepatutnya mendarat di Beijing 6.30 pagi.
Sehingga ini, nasib pesawat itu, yang membawa 227 penumpang dari 14 negara termasuk 38 rakyat Malaysia selain 12 anak kapal, tidak diketahui.
Azaharuddin dalam sidang medianya mengesahkan dua penumpang misteri itu menaiki MH370 dan pihaknya mempunyai rakaman kamera litar tertutup ketika mereka mendaftar masuk ke dalam pesawat berkenaan.
Susulan itu, Menteri Dalam Negeri Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi berkata siasatan terperinci akan memberi tumpuan khusus kepada Jabatan Imigresen cawangan KLIA.
"Saya masih hairan takkanlah (pegawai imigresen) tak boleh fikir, orang Itali dan Austria tapi muka macam orang Asia," katanya.
Mengikut laporan agensi berita CNN, dua penumpang misteri itu membeli tiket penerbangan secara bersama melalui China Southern Airlines.
CNN turut melaporkan pasport dua warganegara itu dilapor hilang beberapa tahun lepas di negara Asia Tenggara dan pihak berkuasa Itali serta Austria mengesahkan tiada rakyat mereka menaiki pesawat MH370.
Sementara itu, Pegawai Meteorologi Pusat Cuaca Nasional, Jabatan Meteorologi Malaysia, Khairul Najib Ibrahim berkata tiada sebarang perubahan cuaca ketara berhampiran perairan negara yang dilihat boleh mengancam penerbangan pesawat MH370 sewaktu ia dilaporkan hilang.
Sehingga 8.30 malam dalam sidang media terakhir untuk hari ini, Azaharuddin mengesahkan operasi mencari dan menyelamat yang menyaksikan pembabitan sejumlah 34 pesawat dan 40 kapal laut membabitkan aset negara dan luar negara, masih gagal mengesan pesawat MH370. -Bernama
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