The first submarine mission to find the wreckage of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 had to be aborted early after exceeding its depth limit.
The first submarine mission to find the wreckage of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 had to be aborted early after exceeding its depth limit.
The co-pilot of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 reportedly tried to make a mobile phone call in the moments before the plane disappeared from radar screens.
Since March 8 we have been hooked with the live reportage of this tragic event – it has all the elements of a thriller. Interestingly, save for the initial disappearance, what has kept us refreshing pages is nothing more and nothing less than opinion-based reportage and speculation. In other words, beyond the disappearance nothing certain has happened.
Malaysian officials have released a transcript of the full radio communications with the pilot of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, but the exchanges offer no clues as to the reason for the crash or the location of the wreckage.
A total of five aircraft have now spotted objects floating in the southern Indian Ocean in their search for the Missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.