A new piece of possible Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 debris, discovered last week by tourists on the island of Rodrigues, about 1,200 miles off the coast of east Africa, may tell investigators more about what might have happened to the mysteriously missing plane than any of the five fragments of possible or confirmed Flight MH370 that have been discovered previously.
The new debris find is believed by independent investigators, as well as by the individuals who found it, to come from the interior of the Malaysia Airlines plane’s cabin, possibly from the business class passenger section.
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, a Boeing 777-200 with 238 passengers and crew on board, suddenly cut off communication with the ground during what looked like a routine overnight flight between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing on March 8, 2014 — almost 25 months ago.
Investigators determined, using satellite data, that the plane most likely took a sharp, westerly turn off of its route and flew for another seven hours until crashing onto a remote stretch of the Indian Ocean. But until a piece of the plane’s wing was discovered on Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean last July, there was no hard evidence to support that scenario, or even that the plane crashed at all.
03/04/16 Inquister
To Read the News in full at Source, Click the Headline
The new debris find is believed by independent investigators, as well as by the individuals who found it, to come from the interior of the Malaysia Airlines plane’s cabin, possibly from the business class passenger section.
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, a Boeing 777-200 with 238 passengers and crew on board, suddenly cut off communication with the ground during what looked like a routine overnight flight between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing on March 8, 2014 — almost 25 months ago.
Investigators determined, using satellite data, that the plane most likely took a sharp, westerly turn off of its route and flew for another seven hours until crashing onto a remote stretch of the Indian Ocean. But until a piece of the plane’s wing was discovered on Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean last July, there was no hard evidence to support that scenario, or even that the plane crashed at all.
03/04/16 Inquister