Missing Malaysia Airlines plane's legal limbo hampers
probe
Kuala Lumpur: Investigators trying to solve the
disappearance without trace of a Malaysia Airlines jetliner face an extremely
rare challenge that could hinder their efforts: they lack the powers of a formal
air safety investigation.
Malaysian authorities could not yet convene a
formal investigation due to a lack of evidence on where - namely, in which
national jurisdiction - the jet crashed.
Four days after Flight MH370
went missing in mid-air with 239 people on board, no nation has stepped forward
to initiate and lead an official probe, leaving a formal leadership vacuum that
industry experts say appears unprecedented.
Malaysian officials are
conducting their own informal investigations, in cooperation with other
governments and foreign agencies, but they lack the legal powers that would come
with a formal international probe under UN-sanctioned rules.
Those powers
include the legal rights to take testimony from all witnesses and other parties,
the right to have exclusive control over the release of information and the
ability to centralise a vast amount of fragmentary evidence.
A senior
official familiar with the preliminary Malaysian probe said Malaysian
authorities could not yet convene a formal investigation due to a lack of
evidence on where - namely, in which national jurisdiction - the Boeing
777-200ER jet crashed.
Deputy commander of Vietnam Air Force Do
Minh Tuan (third from left) speaks during a news conference after a mission to
find missing Malaysia Airlines flight.
He said this was not
hampering their work, that preliminary investigations had begun and that they
were working with their neighbours, US officials and the jet's maker,
Boeing.
The Malaysians have begun collecting information from
neighbouring countries without any problems, including air-traffic control
communications and radar data, he said. "There have been no issues in getting
that information."
But Southeast Asian waters are rife with territorial
disputes, and any decision by Malaysia to unilaterally open a formal
investigation under UN rules could be seen as a subtle assertion of sovereignty
if the crash site turns out to be inside another country's
territory.
Without a formal investigative process being convened quickly
under rules set out by the International Civil Aviation Organisation, a UN
agency, there is a risk that crucial early detective work could be hampered, and
potential clues and records lost, air accident experts said.
Witnesses
such as cargo handlers, mechanics and company officials might be reluctant to
speak to Malaysian investigators who were operating outside a formal
ICAO-sanctioned probe which could offer them some protection from law suits,
experts said.
"The sole objective of an accident investigation is to
prevent future accidents and not to apportion blame or liability," said aviation
lawyer Simon Phippard of international legal firm Bird & Bird.
"The
international standards attempt to provide a degree of protection, for example
from criminal prosecution, for individuals who give statements to the
enquiry."
The lack of a formal investigation also means Malaysia does not
have exclusive control over the release of information or the ability to
centralise fragmentary evidence such as wreckage parts and witness accounts,
effectively relying for cooperation on other parties' good-will, the experts
said.
Under a formal investigation, a board is set up to designate
parties to the investigation, including the plane maker, engine maker, unions,
the airline and aviation safety regulatory agency of the country where the
airline is based. Each of these parties typically has a representative on each
of the working groups.
"If they haven't even decided what country is in
charge of the investigation, then whatever is being done at this point is
probably suffering from a severe lack of top-down control and coordination,"
said Ted Ellett, an aviation lawyer at Hogan Lovells in Washington and a former
Federal Aviation Administration chief counsel.
US investigators from the
National Transportation Safety Board, FAA and Boeing arrived in Kuala Lumpur on
Monday and, according to the official familiar with the Malaysian probe, have
been talking with the Malaysian investigators.
An NTSB-led team,
including the FAA and Boeing officials, is "standing by for when the aircraft is
located and they are in touch with Malaysian officials and have offered our
assistance and support for anything they may need," NTSB spokeswoman Kelly
Nantel said.
Boeing and FAA declined to comment.
China and
Malaysia
A lack of clarity over the investigation already appears to be a
source of tension between Malaysia and China, which had up to 154 citizens on
the Beijing-bound flight and is pushing for a significant role in the
investigation. China's Foreign Ministry urged Malaysia on Monday to step up its
search efforts and start an investigation "as soon as possible and
correctly".
The deputy head of China's civil aviation authority urged
Malaysia to help a team of investigators it has said is ready to fly to the
Southeast Asian nation to help with the probe.
Governments usually step
forward quickly after an accident to claim leadership of the investigation,
based primarily on the territory where the plane crashed.
That crucial
information remains unknown in this case, as navies, military aircraft,
coastguard and civilian ships from 10 nations scour a huge swathe of the sea
from the South China Sea to the Strait of Malacca off Malaysia's western
coast.
The official familiar with the preliminary Malaysian investigation
said the Malaysian government could not launch a formal probe until the crash
site had been found, and that it planned to work closely with US authorities and
Australia.
"If we wait, we will lose precious time. We know that. That is
why our guys have been gathering all of the records and data," the official
said.
Under UN rules, if a plane crashes in international waters, the
country where the aircraft is registered - in this case, Malaysia - is in charge
of the investigation.
So, for example, Air France quickly took control of
the official investigation when its passenger jet crashed in waters far out into
the Atlantic Ocean in 2009, even though no wreckage had yet been
found.
Legal protection
Vietnam would have jurisdiction if the
plane crashed in its territory, but it does not have the resources to lead an
investigation and would likely have to get outside help, two regional aviation
officials said.
Under rules governed by ICAO, setting up an investigation
grants "unhampered access" to all relevant materials including wreckage and data
and "unrestricted control" over the evidence and public
communications.
"Parties don't relish the idea of their officials or
employees being queried or formally interviewed in these accident
investigations," Mr Ellett said.
"If there's any question about who has
the authority to do it, the parties involved could say we're not going to
participate until we know who's really in charge."
With lawsuits
potentially swirling, the investigation is meant to encourage witnesses to speak
freely about the incident in the interests of airline
safety.
Investigators will typically "freeze" documents and records,
especially the maintenance records of the aircraft, and acquire radar images and
air traffic control recordings. Groups specialising in operations, maintenance
and sometimes human factors are set up to sift through each scrap of
evidence.
"I can't remember anything like this. Usually it is pretty
clear who is responsible for the investigation and they get to work straight
away," said one European air safety official, who asked not to be
identified.
"It is very important to get all the factual information as
soon as possible."
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