Thai radar saw ‘unknown jet’ after MH370 vanished
Thai radar picked up an “unknown aircraft” minutes after flight MH370 last transmitted its location but officials failed to report the findings earlier as the plane was not considered a threat, the air force said Wednesday.
Malaysia's
acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein shows two maps with
corridors of the last known possible location of the missing Malaysia
Airlines MH370 plane.
The
information emerged during checks of radar logs on Monday -- nine days
after the Malaysia Airlines jet carrying 239 passengers and crew
disappeared -- after a request from the Malaysian government, according
to Air Marshal Monthon Suchookorn.
An
“unknown aircraft was detected at 00:28 (local time, 1:28 am Malaysian
time), six minutes after MH370 vanished” in the South China Sea, moving
southwest towards Kuala Lumpur and the Strait of Malacca, he told AFP.
That
timing corresponds with the last transmission from the Boeing 777's
transponder at 1:21 am Malaysian time, which relayed information about
the plane's altitude and location.
The
timing of the plane being spotted travelling in the opposite direction
from MH370's intended flight path to Beijing also comes after the final
voice communication from the jet, a seemingly relaxed “All right, good
night” at 1:19 am.
Malaysia Airlines believes it was the co-pilot speaking from the cockpit.
Monthon
said that although the signal was sporadic, the aircraft was later again
picked up by Thai radar swinging north and disappearing over the
Andaman Sea.
“It's not confirmed that the aircraft is MH370,” he said, adding he was unable to give “exact times” of the later sightings.
The plane
slipped off Malaysian civilian radar screens at 1:30 am but continued
to blip on its military radars until 2:15 am before disappearing
entirely.
The Thai
revelations are likely to fuel anger at the apparently sluggish and at
times contradictory official response to the jet's disappearance, which
has left anguished relatives pleading for answers on the fate of their
loved ones.
The Thai
air force did not check its records because the aircraft was not in
“Thai airspace and it was not a threat to Thailand”, the spokesman said,
denying it had been “withholding information”.
Initially
the massive search for the vanished jet focused on the Gulf of Thailand
and adjacent South China Sea, with several nations sending boats,
helicopters and jets to scour the waters.
The
investigation into the fate of the Boeing 777 has focused on findings it
was likely deliberately diverted from its flight path to Beijing,
probably by someone in the cockpit with advanced aviation skills.
But the
drip-feed of often conflicting information from Malaysia has sparked
fury among desperate relatives and condemnation from Chinese
authorities. Two-thirds of those on board were Chinese.
Twenty-six
countries are now involved in the hunt which covers a vast arc of land
and sea, in a northern corridor over south and central Asia, and a
southern corridor stretching deep into the southern Indian Ocean towards
Australia.
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