2 penumpang pesawat MAS MH370 yang menggunakan pasport palsu , dikesan membeli tiket mereka bersama-sama di Thailand
Adakah ini menunjukkan mereka mengenali antara satu sama lain atau lebih tepat lagi KAWAN ?
Kedua-dua pasport yang dipalsukan itu milik rakyat AUSTRIA dan ITALY , jadi tentunya yang menyamar guna pasport palsu itu ialah orang barat dan berbangsa Eropah atau nampak seperti orang barat
Apa yang mereka lakukan sebenarnya , benarkah MH370 telah dirampas ?
Klik link dibawah untuk pengesahan maklumat yang saya berikan ini .
Yang Guna Passport Palsu Beli Tiket Bersama-sama
Berita penuh
Two people who traveled on the missing Malaysia Airlines flight under the passports of an Italian and an Austrian citizen appear to have bought their tickets together.
The tickets were bought
from China Southern Airlines in Thai baht at identical prices, according
to China's official e-ticket verification system Travelsky.
The ticket
numbers are contiguous, which indicates the tickets were issued
together.
The new information adds
to the mystery that has enveloped the fate of Malaysia Airlines Flight
370, the passenger jet that disappeared over Southeast Asia early
Saturday on its way to Beijing.
Italy and Austria have
said that none of their citizens were on board the plane.
And officials
say the Italian and Austrian whose names were on the passenger manifest
both had their passports stolen in Southeast Asia in recent years.
The two tickets booked
with China Southern Airlines both start in Kuala Lumpur, flying to
Beijing, and then onward to Amsterdam.
The Italian passport's ticket
continues to Copenhagen, the Austrian's to Frankfurt.
Authorities say they are investigating the identities of some of those on board who appear to have issues with their passports.
But for the anguished family members of the 239 people on board the Boeing 777-200ER, the agonizing wait goes on.
Big questions far outweigh the few fragments of information that have emerged about the plane's
disappearance.
What happened to the plane? Why was no distress signal issued? Who exactly was aboard?
The passenger jet,
carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew members, may have changed course and
turned back toward Kuala Lumpur, Malaysian military officials said at a
news conference Sunday.
But the pilot appears to
have given no signal to authorities that he was turning around, the
officials said, attributing the change of course to indications from
radar data.
Huge search
Altogether forty ships
and 22 planes were scouring a portion of the South China Sea on Sunday
for any sign of where the flight, operated by Malaysia's flagship
airline, might have gone down, Malaysian authorities said.
The large, multinational
team is focusing its efforts near the Gulf of Thailand, part of the
South China Sea that lies between several Southeast Asian countries.
The area in focus, about
90 miles south of Vietnam's Tho Chu Island, is the same one as where a
Vietnamese search plane reportedly spotted oil slicks that stretched
between six and nine miles.
Malaysian authorities have not yet confirmed the report of the oil slicks, which came from Vietnam's official news agency.
Late Sunday afternoon,
Vietnam sent a boat to investigate a "strange object" spotted by a
Singaporean search plane in the area, said Hung Nguyen with Vietnamese
National Search and Rescue Committee.
As the search continues, relatives of those on board the plane continue to await news of the fate of their loved ones.
Among the passengers,
there were 154 people from China or Taiwan; 38 Malaysians, and three
U.S. citizens. Five of the passengers were less than 5 years old.
If all those on board
the flight are found to have died, it will rank as the deadliest airline
disaster since November 12, 2001, when American Airlines Flight 587 crashed into a New York neighborhood, killing all 260 people on board and five more on the ground.
Passenger manifest questioned
A fuller picture of what happened may not become available until searchers find the plane and its flight data recorder.
"We have not been able
to locate anything, see anything," Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, the director
general of civil aviation in Malaysia, told reporters Sunday.
Confusion over who
exactly was on the plane has drawn particular attention, notably the
case of the Italian and Austrian passports.
The passport mystery raised concerns about the possibility of terrorism, but officials cautioned that it was still too early to arrive at any conclusions.
A U.S. intelligence
official said that no link to terrorism had been discovered so far, but
that authorities were still investigating.
Another possible explanation for the use of the stolen passports is illegal immigration.
There are previous cases
of illegal immigrants using fake passports trying to get into Western
countries. And
Southeast Asia is known to be a booming market for stolen
passports.
Interpol database
Malaysian authorities
have been in contact with counterterrorism organizations about possible
passport issues, Malaysia's transportation minister Hishamuddin Hussein
said.
He didn't specify how many potential passport issues there were, saying authorities are looking at the whole passenger manifest.
The U.S. government has
been briefed on the stolen passports and reviewed the names of the
passengers in question but found nothing at this point to indicate foul
play, said a U.S. law enforcement official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
Of the two passports in
question, the Italian one had been reported stolen and was in Interpol's
database, CNN Law Enforcement Analyst Tom Fuentes said, citing sources
at Interpol.
Additionally, no inquiry
was made by Malaysia Airlines to determine if any passengers on the
flight were traveling on stolen passports, he said. Many airlines do not
check the database, he said.
Rahman, the Malaysian aviation official, declined to say whether the airline or Malaysian authorities had checked the database.
The National
Transportation Safety Board announced late Saturday that a team of its
investigators was en route to Asia to help with the investigation, the
agency said.
Disappearing during cruise
But there is a precedent for
a modern jetliner to fall from the sky while "in the cruise" and lay
hidden for months, according to CNN aviation correspondent Richard
Quest.
On June 1, 2009, Air
France flight 447 was en route from Rio De Janeiro to Paris' Charles de
Gaulle International Airport when communications ended suddenly from the
Airbus A330, another state-of-the-art aircraft.
It took four searches
over the course of nearly two years to locate the bulk of flight 447's
wreckage and the majority of the 228 bodies in a mountain range deep
under the ocean.
It took even longer to find the cause of the disaster.
In May 2011, the
aircraft's voice recorder and flight data recorder were recovered from
the ocean floor after an extensive search using miniature submersible
vehicles.
It was not until July
2012 that investigators published their report, which blamed the crash
on a series of errors by the pilots and a failure to react effectively
to technical problems.
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