Relatives of passengers lost onboard ill-fated flight wonder whether a repeat disaster could happen, and if they will get an answer in their lifetime

Shortly after midnight on 8 March 2014, a Boeing 777 heaved into the air from Kuala Lumpur and climbed steadily to its assigned cruising altitude of 35,000ft. After being instructed to switch frequencies to Vietnamese air traffic control, the pilot replied in the polite but methodical manner that is common in radio calls: “Good night, Malaysian three seven zero.” It was the last message that would ever be received from Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.

A decade has passed since the plane veered wildly off course during a routine flight to Beijing and disappeared but, despite one of the largest and most expensive multinational searches in history, one of aviation’s greatest mysteries remains unsolved.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Body of missing boy, 17, found by police in Staffordshire lake

Officers were called to reservoir north-west of Leek after three boys were…

Lib Dems hook up with 5G cranks and give a boost to wild conspiracy | Nick Cohen

Irrational notions become dangerous when supported by those who know better Paranoid…

Unacceptable for one party to block Stormont, says Irish PM

Micheál Martin is visiting Belfast to try to break deadlock over DUP’s…