The pilot of Malaysian
Airlines flight MH370 ‘deliberately depressurised the cabin’ in order to
‘slowly kill everyone on board’, experts claim. ‘Troubled and lonely’ captain
Zaharie Ahmed Shah then crashed the plane into the Indian Ocean, killing all
238 passengers, according to the independent group that has worked on the case.
The group behind the claims
is made up of dedicated aviation experts, whose sole mission is to find out
what happened to the doomed flight. Some were even called in to help the
official search for the plane, which went missing on March 8, 2014. They claim
Shah deliberately steered the Boeing 777 off course, before either waiting for
the jet to run out of fuel or deliberately nose-diving it into the water so it
disintegrated on impact.
The new claims are reported
in The Atlantic, by respected aviation expert William Langewiesche. According
to Mr Langewiesche, the most likely theory is that Shah either killed or
incapacitated his co-pilot, before depressurising the cabin. Electrical
engineer Mike Exner, a member of the independent group, believes Shah also made
a steep climb to 40,000ft before the murder-suicide. Mr Exner says climbing so
rapidly, would have accelerated the depressurising process.
An intentional
depressurisation would have been an obvious way – and probably the only way –
to subdue a potentially unruly cabin in an airplane that was going to remain in
flight for hours to come,’ adds Mr Langewiesche. He said: ‘In the cabin, the
effect would have gone unnoticed, but for the sudden appearance of the
drop-down oxygen masks and perhaps the cabin crew’s use of the few portable
units of similar design. ‘None of those cabin masks was intended for more than
about 15 minutes of use during emergency descents to altitudes below 13,000
feet; they would have been of no value at all cruising at 40,000 feet.
‘The cabin occupants would
have become incapacitated within a couple of minutes, lost consciousness, and
gently died without any choking or gasping for air.’ Flight MH370 was en route
from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people aboard on March 8, 2014 and its
disappearance remains one of the greatest mysteries in aviation history. A
number of theories have been put forward about what happened to the plane,
including that veteran pilot Shah, who flew a similar path on his flight
simulator at home, was depressed at the time.
A fellow 777 captain has
said he has reluctantly concluded that his close friend deliberately crashed
the plane. ‘It doesn’t make sense. It’s hard to reconcile with the man I knew.
But it’s the necessary conclusion,’ the unnamed pilot told The Atlantic. The
fellow pilot speculated that the mental state of Shah’s could have been a
contributing factor to his decision. ‘Zaharie’s marriage was bad. In the past
he slept with some of the flight attendants,’ he said.
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