Good Talks|June 05, 2014 10:18 EDT
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 Conspiracy Theories: Logs Released But Hidden Details Spark More Rumors
Barely three months after the abrupt disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, authorities are still blinded as to where the location of the final landing of the aircraft is. Extensive search and ocean floor mapping were conducted by joint forces of Australian and Malaysian governments with assistance from United States and China, but investigating panels are convinced that South Indian Ocean is not the final resting place for the demised plane.
Based on Mirror UK's report, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has reasons to believe that the plane carrying 239 passengers was hijacked. WYNC Data Team identified 634 runways where MH 370 could have landed given the presumption that the plane was attacked.
Prime Minister Razak explained that the aircraft's communication system was disabled prior to reaching Malaysia's eastern coastline. "Shortly afterwards between the border of Malaysian and Vietnamese air traffic control the aircraft's transponder was switched off," he said.
Previous reports also revealed that MH 370 could have possibly turned back heading north west before the air control traffic management lost signal. "These movements are consistent with deliberate action by someone on the plane," Prime Minister Razak said.
Chances of determining whether the missing Malaysian flight was deliberately attacked remain inconclusive due to missing extraneous information provided by British satellite company, Inmarsat. According to Extreme Tech website, 47 pages of satellite logs were already released, but data are already human-readable logs; therefore, eliminating possibilities for further investigation and verifications.
Meanwhile, U.S. Bluefin-21 has suspended the next phase of the search until August. The underwater vessel commissioned by the Joint Agency Coordination Centre has covered more than 23,000 square miles of the area. Sightings of ocean debris and underwater pings were believed to have originated from the Malaysian aircraft, but recent findings showed that these objects are nothing but sea trash and noises produced by red herrings.