Noen av oss har ment at flyet ble effektivt tatt over av èn flyger og fløyet til det slapp opp for brennstoff og havarerte. (Red.)
'MH370 debris' found off Mozambique coast suggests jet EXPLODED &
was 'out of control'
OBLITERATED plane wreckage found on a beach
in Mozambique, believed to be part of crashed jet MH370, has led experts to
suggest that the plane exploded and was not under the control of a pilot when it
crashed.
A shard of wreckage, believed to be from missing
jet MH370, was found on a beach in Malaysia
The mangled triangular
piece of debris is said to be part of missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370,
which reportedly crashed in the southern Indian Ocean on March 8 2014, killing
239 people.
The shard of wreckage, which is a metre wide and long,
was found on the east coast of Mozambique by a South African tour operator, Jean
Viljoen.
Mr Viljoen described it as "kind of almost like a triangular
shape" and has handed it in to local police who are now
investigating.
The wreckage is so badly damaged and mangled experts
believe it proves the plane did not land softly at sea under the control of a
pilot as has been assumed, but may have exploded instead.
Some theorists
believe pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah deliberately crashed the airline into the
ocean, committing suicide and bringing passengers down with him in a violent
crash.
But others suggest that the plane may have caught fire or suffered
an explosive technical glitch after taking off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing,
with Zaharie and his co-pilot, Fariq Abdul Hamid, becoming unconscious, flying
on auto-pilot until it ran out of fuel and crashed into the ocean.
The
damaged nature of the wreckage, indicating an explosion, may support both
theories.
The shard is the latest piece of wreckage believed to belong to
the controversial plane, after several parts have been discovered recently off
the African coast that are believed to have drifted 2000km from the suspected
crash site at sea to south eastern Australia.
Mike Exner, a member of IG
- the Independent Group tasked with investigating the aircraft's disappearance -
is confident that the latest piece of wreckage does in fact belong to MH370 as
it is said to resemble the tail of a Boeing 77 - the same aircraft carrier as
MH370.
Mr Exner says the shard has a Boeing identification number,
leaving little questions that it is from the missing jet, as no other 777s have
come down in the Indian Ocean.
Australian aviation writer Ben Sandilands
states the piece of wreckage puts an end to theories that the plane glided
smoothly into the Indian Ocean.
He said: "Whatever part of the jet it
comes from, the extensive damage carried by the piece of suspected wreckage is
inconsistent with widely-promoted theories that MH370 was landed under pilot
control."
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