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'''Malaysia Airlines Flight 370''' (MH370/MAS370), also marketed as [[China Southern Airlines]] flight 748 (CZ748) through a [[codeshare agreement|codeshare]], was a scheduled passenger flight from [[Kuala Lumpur International Airport|Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]], to [[Beijing Capital International Airport|Beijing]], China. On 8{{nbsp}}March 2014, the [[Boeing 777|Boeing 777-200ER]] aircraft operated by [[Malaysia Airlines]] disappeared in flight with 227 passengers on board from 15 countries, most of whom were Chinese, and 12 crew members. The aircraft last made contact with [[air traffic control]] less than an hour after take-off.
[[File:Big Scrotum 1.jpg|500px]]'''Malaysia Airlines Flight 370''' (MH370/MAS370), also marketed as [[China Southern Airlines]] flight 748 (CZ748) through a [[codeshare agreement|codeshare]], was a scheduled passenger flight from [[Kuala Lumpur International Airport|Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]], to [[Beijing Capital International Airport|Beijing]], China. On 8{{nbsp}}March 2014, the [[Boeing 777|Boeing 777-200ER]] aircraft operated by [[Malaysia Airlines]] disappeared in flight with 227 passengers on board from 15 countries, most of whom were Chinese, and 12 crew members. The aircraft last made contact with [[air traffic control]] less than an hour after take-off.


A joint [[search and rescue|search-and-rescue]] effort covering an area of {{convert|27000|nmi2|abbr=off}} in the [[Strait of Malacca]] and the [[South China Sea]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-26541057 |title=BBC News - Malaysia Airlines MH370: Last communication revealed |publisher=Bbc.com |date=1970-01-01 |accessdate=2014-03-13}}</ref><ref name=20140310cbcnews/> is being conducted by more than 12 countries. Vietnam briefly reduced its efforts on 11 March, but the search area continued to expand and searchers began to look for evidence on land. On 12 March, authorities also began to search the [[Andaman Sea]], northwest of the Strait of Malacca.<ref name=20140310indie/><ref name=Reuters>{{cite web|last=Grudgings|first=Stuart|title=Malaysia Airlines plane crashes in South China Sea with 239 people aboard: report|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/08/us-malaysiaairlines-flight-idUSBREA2701720140308|accessdate=8 March 2014}}</ref><ref name="id">{{cite web|url=http://www.nst.com.my/latest/font-color-red-missing-mh370-font-indonesia-helps-in-search-for-airliner-1.504168|title=MISSING MH370: Indonesia helps in search for airliner|work=[[New Straits Times]]|date=9 March 2014|accessdate=9 March 2014|author=Tasnim Lokman}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Grudgings|first=Stewart|title=Confusion as search for Malaysian jet spreads across SE Asia|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/12/us-malaysiaairlines-flight-idUSBREA2701720140312|accessdate=12 March 2014|agency=Reuters}}</ref>
A joint [[search and rescue|search-and-rescue]] effort covering an area of {{convert|27000|nmi2|abbr=off}} in the [[Strait of Malacca]] and the [[South China Sea]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-26541057 |title=BBC News - Malaysia Airlines MH370: Last communication revealed |publisher=Bbc.com |date=1970-01-01 |accessdate=2014-03-13}}</ref><ref name=20140310cbcnews/> is being conducted by more than 12 countries. Vietnam briefly reduced its efforts on 11 March, but the search area continued to expand and searchers began to look for evidence on land. On 12 March, authorities also began to search the [[Andaman Sea]], northwest of the Strait of Malacca.<ref name=20140310indie/><ref name=Reuters>{{cite web|last=Grudgings|first=Stuart|title=Malaysia Airlines plane crashes in South China Sea with 239 people aboard: report|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/08/us-malaysiaairlines-flight-idUSBREA2701720140308|accessdate=8 March 2014}}</ref><ref name="id">{{cite web|url=http://www.nst.com.my/latest/font-color-red-missing-mh370-font-indonesia-helps-in-search-for-airliner-1.504168|title=MISSING MH370: Indonesia helps in search for airliner|work=[[New Straits Times]]|date=9 March 2014|accessdate=9 March 2014|author=Tasnim Lokman}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Grudgings|first=Stewart|title=Confusion as search for Malaysian jet spreads across SE Asia|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/12/us-malaysiaairlines-flight-idUSBREA2701720140312|accessdate=12 March 2014|agency=Reuters}}</ref>

Revision as of 09:59, 14 March 2014

Malaysia Airlines Flight 370
9M-MRO, the aircraft involved in the incident, at Charles de Gaulle Airport in 2011
Missing aircraft
Date8 March 2014 (2014-03-08)
SummaryMissing
SiteLast known position 6°55′15″N 103°34′43″E / 6.92083°N 103.57861°E / 6.92083; 103.57861
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 777-200ER
OperatorMalaysia Airlines
Registration9M-MRO
Flight originKuala Lumpur International Airport
DestinationBeijing Capital International Airport
Passengers227
Crew12

File:Big Scrotum 1.jpgMalaysia Airlines Flight 370 (MH370/MAS370), also marketed as China Southern Airlines flight 748 (CZ748) through a codeshare, was a scheduled passenger flight from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing, China. On 8 March 2014, the Boeing 777-200ER aircraft operated by Malaysia Airlines disappeared in flight with 227 passengers on board from 15 countries, most of whom were Chinese, and 12 crew members. The aircraft last made contact with air traffic control less than an hour after take-off.

A joint search-and-rescue effort covering an area of 27,000 square nautical miles (93,000 square kilometres; 36,000 square miles) in the Strait of Malacca and the South China Sea[1][2] is being conducted by more than 12 countries. Vietnam briefly reduced its efforts on 11 March, but the search area continued to expand and searchers began to look for evidence on land. On 12 March, authorities also began to search the Andaman Sea, northwest of the Strait of Malacca.[3][4][5][6]

Two passengers boarded the aircraft using stolen passports, which initially raised concerns of a terrorist plot,[7] but Malaysian police subsequently identified both passengers saying they were unlikely to be terrorists.[8]

There have been a number of false leads.[9] US officials have said they expect the search to be extended to the Indian Ocean,[10][11] as their investigators have reviewed the possibility that the aircraft headed west back across the Malay Peninsula and remained capable of flying for another four hours after first disappearing from radar.[12][13]

On 13 March, Malaysia Airlines retired the codes MH370 and MH371.[14]

Disappearance

The flight departed from Kuala Lumpur International Airport on 8 March at 00:41 local time (16:41 UTC, 7 March) and was scheduled to land at Beijing Capital International Airport at 06:30 local time (22:30 UTC, 7 March). It ascended to its assigned cruise altitude of 35,000 feet (10,700 m) and was travelling at 471 knots (542 mph; 872 km/h) true airspeed when it ceased all communications and the transponder signal was lost. The aircraft's last known position was 6°55′15″N 103°34′43″E / 6.92083°N 103.57861°E / 6.92083; 103.57861, corresponding to the navigational waypoint IGARI, at which the aircraft was due to alter its course slightly eastward. The aircraft was also expected to contact air traffic control in Ho Chi Minh City as it passed into Vietnamese airspace just north of the point where contact was lost.[15][16] The New Straits Times reported on 9 March that the captain of another aircraft had attempted to reach the pilots of MH370 "just after 1:30 am" to relay Vietnamese Air Traffic Control's request for MH370 to contact it. The captain said he was able to establish contact but just heard "mumbling" and static.[17]

Malaysia Airlines issued a media statement at 07:24 confirming that contact had been lost at 02:40 and that search-and-rescue operations had begun.[18] It later emerged that Subang Air Traffic Control had lost contact with the aircraft at 01:22 and notified Malaysia Airlines at 02:40.[19] Neither the crew nor the aircraft's onboard communication systems relayed a distress signal, indications of bad weather, or technical problems before vanishing from radar screens.[20]

The airline reported in its eleventh press release that all of its aircraft are fitted with an Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System (ACARS), a system that automatically transmits data about the status of the aircraft, but added "Nevertheless, there were no distress calls and no information was relayed."[21] When Malaysian officials were asked by a Flightglobal reporter if they had any ACARS information or not, the officials declined to comment.[22]

Subsequent communication

The New Scientist reported that prior to the aircraft's disappearance, two ACARS reports had been automatically issued to engine manufacturer Rolls-Royce's monitoring center in the United Kingdom;[23] and a Wall Street Journal story, citing sources in the US government, said that Rolls-Royce had received an aircraft health report every thirty minutes for five hours, implying that the aircraft had remained in the air for four hours after its transponder went offline.[24] The Malaysian transport minister said details of the Wall Street Journal report were inaccurate during the next day's daily press briefing, stating that the final engine transmission was received at 01:07, prior to the flight's disappearance from secondary radar.[24] Follow-up reporting by Reuters suggested that a cessation of engine reports did not necessarily mean there was no evidence of continued flight as the evidence may have taken the form of "pings" sent by the aircraft's maintenance troubleshooting systems that indicated to satellites it was merely ready to communicate as opposed to sending reports.[25] The Wall Street Journal then corrected its story to drop references to Rolls-Royce and say that the belief of continued flight was "based on analysis of signals sent by the Boeing 777's satellite-communication link... the link operated in a kind of standby mode and sought to establish contact with a satellite or satellites. These transmissions did not include data..." On 13 March the White House Press Secretary said "an additional search area may be opened in the Indian Ocean" based on "some new information"[26] and a senior Pentagon official told ABC News "[w]e have an indication the plane went down in the Indian Ocean," adding that the USS Kidd was being moved to the area.[11]

Search

Location

Route. Start: Kuala Lumpur, destination: Beijing.
A: Andaman Sea, G: Gulf of Thailand. M: Strait of Malacca, S: South China Sea, I: Indian Ocean.
Kuala Lumpur
Last contact
Beijing
1000 km
A
M
G
S
I

The search efforts generated multiple false leads. An admiral of the Vietnamese Navy reported that radar contact with the aircraft was last made over the Gulf of Thailand, but it transpired that this result corresponded to the loss of radar contact by Subang air traffic control rather than the discovery of a crash site.[27][19] Oil slicks were located off the coast of Vietnam on 8 and 9 March and were thought to have possibly arisen from the aircraft. Test results reported on 10 March indicated that the oil slicks did not contain aviation fuel.[28][29] There were reports that a door or other fragment of the aircraft was found about 80 km (50 mi) south of Thổ Chu Island on 9 March. The following day, the Department of Civil Aviation Malaysia reported these claims were untrue; the floating material was not from an aircraft.[30]

The Royal Thai Navy shifted its focus in the search away from the Gulf of Thailand and the South China Sea at the request of its Malaysian counterpart, which is investigating the possibility the aircraft turned around and could have gone down in the Andaman Sea, near Thailand's border.[31] The chief of the Royal Malaysian Air Force, Rodzali Daud, claimed that military recordings of radar signals did not exclude the possibility of the aircraft turning back on its flight path.[32][33] The search radius has been increased from the original 20 nautical miles (37 km; 23 mi) of its last known position,[34] south of Thổ Chu Island, to 100 nautical miles (190 km; 120 mi), and the area now covers the seas to the Strait of Malacca along the west coast of the Malay Peninsula, with waters both to the east of Malaysia in the Gulf of Thailand, and in the Strait of Malacca along Malaysia's west coast, being searched.[35][2][36]

On 11 March, it was reported that military radar indicated the aircraft turned west and continued flying for 70 minutes before disappearing near Pulau Perak;[37][38] and that it was tracked flying at a lower altitude across Malaysia to the Malacca Strait. This last location is approximately 500 km (311 mi) from its last position in contact with air traffic control.[39] The next day Rodzali Daud denied making the statements as reported in the media, requesting that the misreporting be "amended and corrected to prevent further misinterpretations of what is clearly an inaccurate and incorrect report".[40][41] Vietnam scaled back its search operations to await clarification from Malaysia due to the conflicting reports.[42]

On 12 March, authorities also began to search the Andaman Sea, northwest of the Strait of Malacca, and the Malaysian government requested help from India to search in the area.[43] China released satellite images captured three days earlier that show three floating objects measuring up to 24 by 22 metres (79 ft × 72 ft) at 6°42′N 105°38′E / 6.7°N 105.63°E / 6.7; 105.63.[44][45] It turned out there were no floating objects on the suspected crash area.[46][47] The area, according to Vietnamese officials, had been "searched thoroughly" by Vietnam and other countries but it is to be revisited.[48][49] The same day, a New Zealand man, working at the Songa Mercur oil drilling platform, claimed he had seen an aircraft "burning at high altitude ... in one piece" about 50 to 70 kilometres (31 to 43 mi) heading 265 to 275° from his 8°23′N 108°42′E / 8.38°N 108.7°E / 8.38; 108.7 location, at around the time MH370 disappeared.[50] DigitalGlobe, a satellite imaging business, released to the public all available images of the flight path[51] and search area for the public to look for and tag any images they believe may assist in the search.[52]

One aviation expert told AFP that several countries may have detected the aircraft by means of their military radar but are reluctant to share their data because it would reveal their defence capabilities.[53]

On 14 March new information came to light showing that the initially debunked theory of the Washington Post seems to have the possibility of truth in it. The search area was now widened to include the Indian Ocean, since it seems like the engines sent some data to their manufacturer four to five hours after contact with the aircraft was initially lost.[54]

Participation

Royal Australian Air Force AP-3C Orions are participating in the search.
RSS Steadfast from Singapore deployed in the search

In response to the incident, the Malaysian government mobilised its civil aviation department, air force, navy, and Maritime Enforcement Agency; and requested international assistance under Five Power Defence Arrangements provisions and from neighbouring states. Various nations mounted a search and rescue mission in the region's waters.[55][56] The countries have dispatched more than 34 aircraft and 40 ships to the area.[3][2][36] Qatar offered assistance, and the French air-crash investigating agency, the Bureau d'Enquêtes et d'Analyses pour la Sécurité de l'Aviation Civile (BEA), offered to help with any underwater search and recovery operation.[57][58] The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization Preparatory Commission tried, but failed, to use its network of infrasound detection stations to find any sounds made by Flight 370.[59] Types of assets sent by different nations include:

Intelligence sharing

Although Malaysian Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein denied the existence of problems between the participating countries, academics point out that because of regional conflicts, there are genuine trust issues involved in sharing intelligence, and that these are hampering the rescue. An academic at Singapore Management University said "The issues of protecting territory, security intelligence and interests are starting to win over the common goal of finding the plane and closure."[98] According to defence experts, giving others access to radar information may be sensitive on a military level. One suggested that some countries may have already have radar data on the plane but were reluctant to share any information that could potentially reveal their defence capabilities and compromise their own security. As an example: "The rate at which they can take the picture can also reveal how good the radar system is".[98] The Malaysian Transport Minister said his country was "releasing sensitive radar data that would normally be kept confidential".[98]

Aircraft

The flight deck of 9M-MRO in 2004

Flight 370 was operated by a Boeing 777-2H6ER,[a] serial number 28420, registration 9M-MRO. The 404th Boeing 777 produced,[100] it first flew on 14 May 2002, and was delivered new to Malaysia Airlines on 31 May 2002. The aircraft was powered by two Rolls-Royce Trent 892 engines.[100] The missing flight was at about 80% capacity, with 227 out of a possible 283 passengers (35 business, 247 economy).[101] According to the airline, it had accumulated 53,460 hours and 7,525 cycles in service.[102] 9M-MRO had not previously been involved in any major incidents;[103] a minor incident while taxiing at Shanghai Pudong International Airport in August 2012 resulted in significant damage to one of its wingtips, which broke off after striking the tail of another airliner.[104] Its last maintenance 'A' check was carried out on 23 February 2014.[102]

The Boeing 777 is generally regarded by aviation experts as having an "almost flawless" safety record,[105] one of the best of any commercial aircraft.[106] Since its first commercial flight in June 1995, there have only been two previous serious accidents. In January 2008, 47 passengers were injured when ice crystals in the fuel system of British Airways Flight 38 caused it to lose power and crash-land just short of the runway at London Heathrow Airport. In July 2013, three passengers died and 181 were injured when Asiana Airlines Flight 214 crash-landed on final approach to San Francisco International Airport.[107] Both aircraft were damaged beyond repair.[108]

In 2005 a Boeing 777-2H6ER aircraft with the registration 9M-MRG, serial number 28414, operating as Malaysia Airlines Flight 124 flying from Perth to Kuala Lumpur experienced an ADIRU (air data inertial reference unit) fault resulting in uncommanded manoeuvres by the aircraft acting on false indications.[109] In that incident the incorrect data impacted all planes of movement while the aircraft was climbing through 38,000 feet (11,600 m). The aircraft pitched up and climbed to around 41,000 feet (12,500 m), with the stall warning activated. The pilots recovered the aircraft with the autopilot disengaged and requested a return to Perth. During the return to Perth, both the left and right autopilots were briefly activated by the crew, but in both instances the aircraft pitched down and banked to the right. The aircraft was flown manually for the remainder of the flight and landed safely in Perth. There were no injuries and no damage to the aircraft. The ATSB (Australian Transport Safety Bureau) found that the main probable cause of this incident was a latent software error which allowed the ADIRU to use data from a failed accelerometer.[110] The US Federal Aviation Administration issued Emergency Airworthiness Directive (AD) 2005-18-51 requiring all 777 operators to install upgraded software to resolve the error.[111]

Passengers and crew

Nationalities of people aboard Flight 370
Nationality Template:Discreet abbreviation Crew Total
 Australia 6 6
 Canada 2 2
 China 152 152
 France 4 4
 Hong Kong[112] 1 1
 India 5 5
 Indonesia 7 7
 Iran[b] 2 2
 Malaysia 38 12 50
 Netherlands 1 1
 New Zealand 2 2
 Russia 1 1
 Taiwan 1 1
 Ukraine 2 2
 United States 3 3
Total (15 nationalities) 227 12 239

Malaysia Airlines released the names and nationalities of the 227 passengers and 12 crew, based on the flight manifest.[114]

Crew

All the crew members were Malaysian. The flight's captain was 53-year-old Zaharie Ahmad Shah of Penang; he joined Malaysia Airlines in 1981 and had 18,365 hours of flying experience.[115] Zaharie was also an examiner qualified to conduct simulator tests for pilots.[116] His first officer was 27-year-old Fariq Abdul Hamid, an employee of Malaysia Airlines since 2007, with 2,763 flying hours.[117][118] Fariq was transitioning to the Boeing 777-200 after having completed his simulator training.[118]

Passengers

The majority of the passengers (152 of 227) were Chinese citizens, which included a group of 19 artists with 6 family members and 4 staff, returning from a calligraphy exhibition of their work in Kuala Lumpur; 38 passengers were Malaysian. The remaining passengers came from 13 different countries.[119] Of these, 20 were employees of Freescale Semiconductor, a company based in Austin, Texas – 12 were from Malaysia and 8 from China.[120]

Malaysia Airlines sent a team of caregivers and volunteers to provide assistance towards family members of the passengers.[121] In its press releases, the carrier stated that it would bear the expenses of bringing family members of the passengers to Kuala Lumpur and providing them with accommodation, medical care, and counselling.[122] Altogether, 115 family members of the Chinese passengers flew to Kuala Lumpur.[123] Other family members chose to remain in China, fearing they would feel too isolated in Malaysia.[124] The airline offered an ex gratia condolence payment of US$5,000 to the family of each passenger,[125] but relatives considered the conditions unacceptable and asked the airline to review them.[126]

Investigation

Boeing has announced that it is assembling a team of experts to provide technical assistance to investigators,[127] in accordance with International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) protocols. In addition, the United States National Transportation Safety Board announced in an 8 March press release that a team of investigators had been sent along with technical advisers from the Federal Aviation Administration to offer assistance in the investigation.[95] The country that will lead the investigation will not be determined until the missing aircraft is found.[128] Because a formal (ICAO-sanctioned) investigation has not yet started, co-operation and co-ordination between involved parties could suffer, there being "a risk that crucial early detective work could be hampered, and potential clues and records lost", according to experts.[129]

The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation has deployed technical experts and agents to investigate the disappearance.[130] A senior US law enforcement official clarified that FBI agents were not sent to Malaysia.[131] United States and Malaysian officials are reviewing the entire passenger manifest in addition to the two passengers who were confirmed as possessing stolen passports.[132]

Stolen passports

Two of the passengers were travelling with passports stolen from citizens of European countries. Two men identified on the manifest, a 30-year-old Austrian and a 37-year-old Italian, had reported their passports stolen in 2012 and 2013, respectively.[19][133] Interpol stated that both passports were listed on its database of lost and stolen passports, but that no check had been made against its database, noting that very few countries consistently use the database.[134][135] Malaysia's Home Minister, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, criticised his country's immigration officials for failing to stop the passengers travelling on the stolen European passports.[135]

The two one-way tickets purchased for the holders of the stolen passports were booked through China Southern Airlines.[136] It was reported that an Iranian had ordered the cheapest tickets to Europe via telephone. The tickets were paid for in cash.[137][138][139] A Thai police chief suggested that the tickets were bought for illegal Iranian migrants.[140] The two passengers were later identified as Iranian men, one aged 19 and the other 29, who both entered Malaysia on 28 February using valid Iranian passports. The head of Interpol said they were "inclined to conclude that it was not a terrorist incident".[7][113][141][142] The two men were believed to be illegal migrants or asylum seekers.[143][144]

Responses

Criticism of official communication

Communication between official representatives of many organisations and the public regarding the loss of the flight has been beset with confusion. The New York Times noted that the Malaysian government and the airline released imprecise, incomplete, and sometimes inaccurate information, with civilian officials sometimes contradicting military leaders.[145] The Daily Beast suggested that nobody was co-ordinating information.[146] David Learmount, operations and safety editor at Flightglobal, a news and data service for the aviation sector, said the Malaysian government seemed evasive and confused.[145] There are doubts concerning the aircraft's possible location and trajectory.[147][148][149] Australian crisis management expert Mike Smith believes that although the initial stages had been well-managed by Malaysia Airlines, the increasing numbers of government officials commenting publicly created confusion. Smith suggested that, as the disappearance became of international concern, the Malaysian government failed to take control and to establish an emergency crisis control point where the information could be disseminated in a responsible and truthful manner. Smith pointed to contradictions, apparent "finger-pointing, rumours and innuendo ... from Malaysian officials, whose motives we can only speculate about".[150] China, through the official Xinhua News Agency, said that the Malaysian government ought to take charge and conduct the operation with greater transparency.[98]

The Daily Beast observed that the confusion is related to the strength of the military over civilian authority, and where the military either controls or has strong influence over radar coverage and air traffic control, that "there is no coherent system that swings into action in a disaster, no playbook to operate by and no experience of dealing with the public consequences."[146]

Airline

Malaysia Airlines stated it would replace the flight numbers MH370 and MH371 with MH318 and MH319 respectively, as of 14 March 2014, out of respect for the passengers and crew.[14] It is routine for airlines to change flight number after a major mishap.[14]

Notes

  1. ^ The aircraft was a Boeing 777-200ER (for Extended Range) model; Boeing assigns a unique customer code for each company that buys one of its aircraft, which is applied as a suffix to the model number at the time the aircraft is built. The code for Malaysia Airlines is "H6", hence "777-2H6ER".[99]
  2. ^ The manifest released by Malaysia Airlines lists an Austrian and an Italian. These have since been identified as two Iranian nationals who boarded Flight 370 using stolen passports.[113]

References

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  2. ^ a b c Hildebrandt, Amber (10 March 2014). Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370: 'Mystery compounded by mystery'. CBC News.
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  4. ^ Grudgings, Stuart. "Malaysia Airlines plane crashes in South China Sea with 239 people aboard: report". Retrieved 8 March 2014.
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  10. ^ White House: Hunt for missing airliner may extend to Indian Ocean The Washington Post 13 March 2014
  11. ^ a b Martha Raddatz (13 March 2014), US Officials Have 'Indication' Malaysia Airline Crashed into Indian Ocean ABC News
  12. ^ Andy Pasztor (12 March 2014), Missing Airplane Flew On for Hours The Wall Street Journal
  13. ^ Bob Orr (13 March 2014), Did Malaysian plane fly toward Indian Ocean after last contact? CBS News
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  30. ^ "Accident description". Aviation Safety Network. 10 March 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  31. ^ Jim Clancy and Mark Morgenstein (9 March 2014). "New leads explored in hunt for missing Malaysia Airlines flight". CNN News. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
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  35. ^ "Malaysia Airlines: What we know about flight MH370". BBC. 10 March 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
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