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Malaysian Airlines Plane Missing Over Vietnam


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Malaysia and Vietnam have launched searches for a Malaysia Airlines jet that lost contact with traffic controllers, as fears mounted over the fate of the 239 people aboard, including six Australians.

 

The airline has said the plane, on an overnight flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, relayed no distress signal or other indications of trouble.

"The plane lost contact near Ca Mau province airspace as it was preparing to transfer to Ho Chi Minh City air traffic control," a statement posted on the official Vietnamese government website said.

The plane's signal was never transferred to Ho Chi Minh air traffic control, it added.

Ca Mau province is in southernmost Vietnam.

 

March 08, 2014: Flight MH370 carrying 239 people to Beijing has lost contact after departing Kuala Lumpur International at 12:40am local time, Saturday.

The ministry launched a rescue effort to find the plane, working in coordination with Malaysian and Chinese officials, the statement added.

Malaysian authorities dispatched a plane, two helicopters and four vessels to search seas off its east coast in the South China Sea, said Faridah Shuib, a spokeswoman for the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency.

The Philippines said it was sending three navy patrol boats and a surveillance plane to help efforts.

Contact was lost at 2:40 am Malaysian time (0540 AEDT), about two hours after take-off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport, the carrier's CEO Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said.

"Ladies and gentlemen, we are deeply saddened this morning with the news on MH370," he told a press conference in Malaysia.

"Our focus now is to work with emergency responders and authorities, and mobilise full support," he added.

 

"And our thoughts and prayers are with all affected passengers and crew, and their family members."

The airline and Malaysian authorities were liaising with Vietnamese officials, he added.

The Boeing 777-200 was carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew members, Ahmad Jauhari said. However, the nationality breakdown he gave added up to 228 passengers.

They included 153 Chinese nationals plus one infant, 38 Malaysians, and 12 Indonesians.

Six Australians and two New Zealanders also were aboard, three French nationals, four from the United States including one infant, plus passengers from several other countries.

Malaysia Airlines has a good safety record. Its worst-ever crash occurred in 1977, when 93 passengers and 7 crew perished in a hijacking and subsequent crash in southern Malaysia.

 

The pilot of MH370 is Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, who has flown for the airline since 1981, the carrier said.

Its first officer is Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27, joined the airline in 2007.

The plane is more than 11 years old.

The flight path passes over the South China Sea and the Indochinese peninsula before entering southern Chinese airspace.

"This news has made us all very worried," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said in Beijing.

"We hope every one of the passengers is safe. We are doing all we can to get more details."

A Malaysia Airlines aircraft taxis past another plane at the KL International Airport. (Getty)

Chinese and Thai authorities have said the plane did not enter their airspace.

Screens at Beijing's airport indicated at first that the flight was "delayed", but later updated its status to "cancelled".

An accident would be a huge blow for the carrier, which has bled money for years as its struggles to fend off competition from rivals such as fast-growing AirAsia.

"Malaysia Airlines overall has a good track record" on safety, said Shukor Yusof, aviation analyst with Standard & Poor's.

"This incident comes at a most unfortunate time for the airline which is undergoing a transformation to return to profit."

The flag carrier recorded its fourth straight quarterly loss during the final three months of 2013, and warned of a "challenging" year ahead due to intense competition.

The carrier admitted in 2012 it was in "crisis", forcing it to implement a cost-cutting campaign centred on slashing routes and other measures.

Analysts have said poor management, government interference, and union resistance to reform of the 66-year-old airline have hampered its ability to respond to intensifying competition in the industry.

The Boeing 777 also has a solid safety record, with only a handful of incidents since its introduction in the mid-1990s.

In July 2013, a Boeing 777-200 operated by South Korea's Asiana Airlines skidded off the runway upon landing at San Francisco's international airport after it clipped a seawall before touching down.

Three people died.

 

http://news.ninemsn....-people-missing

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Search and rescue operations for the missing plane are being concentrated in a location off the Vietnam coast with coordinates latitude 0655N and longitude 103343E

That sound about right?

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ATC will know what happened, though they likely are not saying as yet.

In a hijacking the pilot would set the transponder code to report that or if the hijackers are sufficiently plane aware, thing 9-11, then they will simply switch it off. That drops it off the secondary surveillance radar but it will still show up on a primary radar. If a major malfunction occurred at 30000 feet or more then there would have been time for some sort of message to ATC, 200nm is no problem for an aircraft at that sort of height on VHF.

My guess would be it either exploded or disintegrated in some big way.

With the recent mass stabbings in Kunming and this being a flight of primarily Chinese the terror angle is a big possibility.

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