Malaysia airlines plane may have crashed 239 people on board #1

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http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/missing-ma...ngers-mobile-phones-ring-not-answered-1439560

I have found this phone thing mystifying from the start. I imagine phone operators have done their utmost to track phones from the start. I know there can be explanations for a phone line ringing even if the phone is deep under the water and broken but I wouldn't think that was common...

According to China.org.cn, 19 families have signed a joint statement saying that their family members' cell phones connected, but the calls hung up. The relatives have asked Malaysia Airlines to reveal any information they might be hiding, seeking an explanation for the eerie phone connections. The relatives have complained that the Malaysina Airlines is not responding as actively as it should.

Suspect this is due to the way mobiles work across international borders.. it's not actually connecting. Need to find the stuff I was reading on it...
 
Whaaat? On the Today Show, they just had a clip of the brother of Philip Wood (a passenger) saying that he had a "goodbye" dinner with his brother recently. :waitasec: I'll try to find the clip.

a good bye dinner, a bon voyage have a good trip see you when you're back dinner, we have them all the time, that's probably what he meant
 
Whaaat? On the Today Show, they just had a clip of the brother of Philip Wood (a passenger) saying that he had a "goodbye" dinner with his brother recently. :waitasec: I'll try to find the clip.

You're overthinking.

He said that he was glad that before Philip travelled, he was glad they'd had dinner with him to send him off on the trip. It was a goodbye dinner, just not a permanent one (although now of course it is).
 
don't think Mr Ali had a stolen passport it didn't say that, it said he was accustomed to booking for others and claims he didn't know the people he had booked had stolen passports, I think
She said that she had been booking tickets for the Iranian contact for almost three years on an average of once a month and there was no evidence to suggest 'Mr Ali' knew they had stolen passports.

Read more at: http://www.firstpost.com/world/live...mmigrants-1424627.html?utm_source=ref_article

Oh I see. He was a third party booking tickets for others through a travel agency ? Hmmm
 
Would it be possible for the plane to drop below the radar and then take off for North Korea without being detected?
 
Live presser being broadcast on BBC and SkyNews right now
 
http://www.theguardian.com/world/bl...-370-search-continues-live-updates?CMP=twt_gu

A Thai travel agent who booked the men with stolen passports onto the missing plane, has told the FT that the tickets were arranged with an “Iranian contact” on behalf of clients looking for cheap tickets to Europe.

Benjaporn Krutnait, owner of the Grand Horizon travel agency in Pattaya, Thailand, said the Iranian, a long-term business contact who she knew only as “Mr Ali”, first asked her to book cheap tickets to Europe for the two men on March 1. Ms Benjaporn initially reserved one of the men on a Qatar Airways flight and the other on Etihad.

But the tickets expired when Ms Benjaporn did not hear back from Mr Ali. When he contacted her again on Thursday, she rebooked the men on the Malaysia Airlines flight through Beijing because it was the cheapest available. Ms Benjaporn booked the tickets through China Southern Airlines via a code share arrangement.

A friend of Mr Ali paid Ms Benjaporn cash for the tickets, she said, adding that it was quite common for people to book tickets in Pattaya through middle men such as Mr Ali, who then take a commission.

 
The Uighurs...

Seen some say it can't be terrorism because no-one has claimed it... no-one has claimed 9/11 either. No-one claimed Lockerbie for over 20 years.

Of course we know. It was Al-Qaeda.
 
... who recently retired as Australia's honorary consul in Phuket, said a huge problem was tourists leaving passports as a deposit when renting jet-skis or motorbikes.

Crooked operators then make a false allegation of damage. The tourist, unwilling to pay, reports the passport stolen at an embassy or consulate and gets a new one. The old passport is sold on into the underworld.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014...ines-thailand-passports-idUSBREA290KD20140310
 
According to the latest press conference (this morning), the oil slick is not from the aircraft. They are now back to square one in their search.

'We have to find the aircraft': Days later, no sign of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370

The only lead investigators had -- an oil slick that a Vietnamese plane spotted 90 miles south of Vietnam's Tho Chu Island in the Gulf of Thailand -- turned out to be a dead end, too.
A sample from the slick showed it was bunker oil, which is typically used to power large cargo ships, and not aircraft oil, Malaysia's state new agency, Bernama, reported Monday. The agency cited the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency's eastern regional enforcement chief, Datuk Nasir Adam.
 
In the press conference, it was suggested that the passengers with stolen passports looked like "Balotelli" (Italian soccer player)
 
In the press conference, it was suggested that the passengers with stolen passports looked like "Balotelli" (Italian soccer player)

well that's a whole other thing - I thought they had said he had Asian features
 
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