Monday, February 25, 2019

The five witnesses who could hold the key to finding MH370: Private detective claims doomed Malaysia Airlines flight was shot down - and says a handful of people can prove it

Five witnesses hold the key to unlocking the mystery of MH370 and discovering where the missing plane crashed, an investigator has claimed.

Irish private detective Noel O'Gara claims the missing Malaysia Airlines plane was shot down by the Malaysian military by mistake, and claims to have spoken to people who saw the flight in its final moments.

Mr O'Gara said this information could be used to find the plane that went missing carrying 239 people while bound for Beijing on March 8, 2014.

In their official report into the disappearance, the Malaysian government said all evidence points to the fact that the plane was under manual control and was deliberately flown over the Indian Ocean.

"Most likely, MH370 is still lying on the sea bed in that area. Unless the Malaysian government recovered it later,' he told The Sun.

'They would know exactly or within a few miles of where it had come down.'

One of the people Mr O'Gara spoke to was New Zealand oil worker Mike McKay, who claims to have seen the plane came down while on his rig near Vietnam.
The aircraft was 'ascending rapidly in the struggle for control of the plane' and then fell, Mr McKay said.

Latife Dalelah was on another flight and saw what she claims was a plane on the surface of the water at the same time of MH370's disappearance.

English sailor Katherine Tee told Australian searchers she saw a burning plane and two smaller planes overhead while she was making her way to Phuket.

Mr O'Gara's two other witnesses are Malaysian fishermen who claimed the plane came down near Kota Bharu in Malaysia.

Mr O'Gara has claimed that the Malaysian government may have covered up the crash and removed evidence from the sea.

The disappearance of MH370, which went massively off course while heading to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur, is one of the biggest mysteries in aviation history.

Although some debris from the plane has been found off the coast of Africa, no part of the main body has been discovered despite a 46,000-square mile search of the Indian Ocean.
In January, Indonesian fisherman Rusli Khusmin, 42, said he and crew members witnessed the disaster.

Rusli recorded the co-ordinates of the site where he says the plane entered the water on a GPS device and held up a map to show reporters.

'I saw the plane moving from left to right like a broken kite,' he said. 'There was no noise, just black smoke as a result of fires before it crashed into the water.'
There was a strong smell of acidic fumes in the air before the plane went down, he added.

He did not explain why he had taken almost five years for him to report his version of events to authorities.
25/02/19 Ben Hill/Daily Mail

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