We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.
Malaysia has officially declared the loss of flight MH370 was an accident and all on board are dead.
"It is with the heaviest heart and deepest sorrow that we officially declare Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 an accident," said Malaysia's civil aviation director-general Azharuddin Abdul Rahman in a broadcast on Malaysian television.
"We officially declare Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 an accident and that all 239 of the passengers and crew onboard are presumed to have lost their lives," he added.
The announcement was in accordance with international civil aviation rules said Mr Azharuddin, adding the declaration officially ends the search for the missing aircraft and would assist the families of those on board to apply for compensation.
International Civil Aviation rules state the definition of the term "accident" includes "the aircraft is missing" and an aircraft is considered to be missing when the official search has been terminated and no wreckage has been found.
1/16
-
Gallery: MH370: Timeline Of False Hopes
March 8: At 9am, an hour after flight MH370 is reported missing, rumours spread online that it has landed safely in China
March 8: Search planes spot two oil slicks in the South China Sea but tests show the fuel is not from an aircraft
March 9: Vietnam search plane spots mystery objects in the South China Sea but they turn out to be unrelated to MH370
March 10: A moss-covered piece of floating sea debris is mistaken for a yellow life raft
March 11: Two MH370 passengers travelling with stolen passports are identified as illegal immigrants from Iran and are no longer suspected of terrorist activity
Mr Azharuddin said search international search teams had spared no expense in their search for the plane.
Every credible lead had been pursued and all available data that tracked the plane to a corner of the southern Indian Ocean had been reviewed, he said.
But Sarah Bajc, whose partner Philip Wood was on board the plane, rejectected the announcement.
"I think they are lying," she said. "It could very well be that the plane crashed. But there is no evidence, and until there is evidence we just can't believe them," she said, referring to the Malaysian government and airline.
1/8
-
Gallery: Missing Passengers Of Flight MH370
Click through for the gallery
Stuntman Ju Kun, 35, was travelling to Beijing to see his two young children before starting work on the new Netflix and Weinstein Company series Marco Polo in Malaysia.
"It is impossible to bring any closure until we have proof."
Some relatives accuse the Malaysian government and the airline of a chaotic response to the plane's initial diversion, which allowed it to disappear, and a subsequent cover-up; charges Kuala Lumpur and Malaysia Airlines strenuously deny.
Flight MH370 vanished on Saturday March 8 2014 during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in China and no trace of the plane, passengers or crew has been found despite extensive searches.
Top Stories
- Breaking News: 'Thundersnow' Storms As Icy Blast Hits UK
- Killed Sydney Hostages' Final Moments Revealed
- One Of Our Dinosaurs Is Retiring: Dippy Bows Out
- IS Sets Sunset Deadline To Save Hostage
- Police Release Video Of Teen's Shooting Death
We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.
Malaysia has officially declared the loss of flight MH370 was an accident and all on board are dead.
"It is with the heaviest heart and deepest sorrow that we officially declare Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 an accident," said Malaysia's civil aviation director-general Azharuddin Abdul Rahman in a broadcast on Malaysian television.
"We officially declare Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 an accident and that all 239 of the passengers and crew onboard are presumed to have lost their lives," he added.
The announcement was in accordance with international civil aviation rules said Mr Azharuddin, adding the declaration officially ends the search for the missing aircraft and would assist the families of those on board to apply for compensation.
International Civil Aviation rules state the definition of the term "accident" includes "the aircraft is missing" and an aircraft is considered to be missing when the official search has been terminated and no wreckage has been found.
1/16
-
Gallery: MH370: Timeline Of False Hopes
March 8: At 9am, an hour after flight MH370 is reported missing, rumours spread online that it has landed safely in China
March 8: Search planes spot two oil slicks in the South China Sea but tests show the fuel is not from an aircraft
]]>
March 9: Vietnam search plane spots mystery objects in the South China Sea but they turn out to be unrelated to MH370
]]>
March 10: A moss-covered piece of floating sea debris is mistaken for a yellow life raft
]]>
March 11: Two MH370 passengers travelling with stolen passports are identified as illegal immigrants from Iran and are no longer suspected of terrorist activity
Mr Azharuddin said search international search teams had spared no expense in their search for the plane.
Every credible lead had been pursued and all available data that tracked the plane to a corner of the southern Indian Ocean had been reviewed, he said.
But Sarah Bajc, whose partner Philip Wood was on board the plane, rejectected the announcement.
"I think they are lying," she said. "It could very well be that the plane crashed. But there is no evidence, and until there is evidence we just can't believe them," she said, referring to the Malaysian government and airline.
1/8
-
Gallery: Missing Passengers Of Flight MH370
Click through for the gallery
Stuntman Ju Kun, 35, was travelling to Beijing to see his two young children before starting work on the new Netflix and Weinstein Company series Marco Polo in Malaysia.
"It is impossible to bring any closure until we have proof."
Some relatives accuse the Malaysian government and the airline of a chaotic response to the plane's initial diversion, which allowed it to disappear, and a subsequent cover-up; charges Kuala Lumpur and Malaysia Airlines strenuously deny.
Flight MH370 vanished on Saturday March 8 2014 during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in China and no trace of the plane, passengers or crew has been found despite extensive searches.
Top Stories
- Breaking News: 'Thundersnow' Storms As Icy Blast Hits UK
- Killed Sydney Hostages' Final Moments Revealed
- One Of Our Dinosaurs Is Retiring: Dippy Bows Out
- IS Sets Sunset Deadline To Save Hostage
- Police Release Video Of Teen's Shooting Death
Anda sedang membaca artikel tentang
MH370 Loss An 'Accident' - All On Board 'Dead'
Dengan url
http://badutjayus.blogspot.com/2015/01/mh370-loss-accident-all-on-board-dead.html
Anda boleh menyebar luaskannya atau mengcopy paste-nya
MH370 Loss An 'Accident' - All On Board 'Dead'
namun jangan lupa untuk meletakkan link
MH370 Loss An 'Accident' - All On Board 'Dead'
sebagai sumbernya
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar