Monday 24th March 2014
One mystery is solved, but a bigger mystery
follows as the search for Malaysia Airlines' MH370 focuses on the spot
in the southern Indian Ocean where the Boeing 777 is believed to have
come down.
The question now being asked is: How can one of the
world's safest aircraft flown by an experienced and highly-rated airline
end up in the ocean after abandoning its regular flight route from
Kuala Lumpur to Beijing?
Sources close to investigation have told London's The Telegraph that a team working on the MH370 mystery believe it was crashed deliberately
The
team investigating the plane's disappearance believes no malfunction or
fire was capable of causing the aircraft's unusual flight or the
disabling of its communications system before it veered wildly off
course on a seven-hour silent flight into the sea.
An analysis of the flight's routing, signalling and communications shows that it was flown "in a rational way".
An official source told The Telegraph
that investigators believe "this has been a deliberate act by someone
on board who had to have had the detailed knowledge to do what was done
... Nothing is emerging that points to motive."
Unidentified
objects have been seen in separate parts of the search area, although
bad weather in the Indian Ocean has disrupted the search for the plane.
The plane vanished from radar screens more than two weeks after leaving Kuala Lumpur with 239 passengers on board.