Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, the only commercial flight crash in history without an exact location identified, occurred seven years ago on March 8, 2014. The flight was carrying 239 people and took off from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. After the bizarre disappearance of MH370, no crash site or fuselage of the plane was found after a long search, and the crew and passengers were judged to have died in the crash.
Recently, an aeronautical engineer from the UK, revealed to the media new developments in the search for the crash site of Malaysia Airlines MH370. He said that through the tracking system, Malaysia Airlines MH370 was found at the bottom of the Southern Indian Ocean near Perth, Australia to the west, which gives the mystery of the bizarre disappearance of Malaysia Airlines MH370 a chance to be finally revealed.
Less than an hour after takeoff, Malaysia Airlines MH370 lost contact with Malaysia’s Subang ATC at the junction of Malaysian and Vietnamese waters, about 140 nautical miles south of Tochu Island. British flight engineer said on an Australian television program that they are now using groundbreaking aviation tracking technology to find the crash site. Research and searches have finally yielded results, and MH370 is likely 1,933 kilometers west of the Australian city of Perth, at a depth of 4,000 meters in the southern Indian Ocean. According to his published report. The underwater terrain at the crash site is complex, and the site contains volcanoes as well as canyons. He was very confident in the search data obtained from the crash site because the tracking technology is the latest GDTAA (capable of instantly tracking and detecting the aircraft’s position) technology combined with radio software data. He also said that if the search is conducted according to the location, he believes that the wreckage of MH370 can be found in 2022. He also mentioned that the presumed crash was caused by “acts of terrorism” such as the hijacking of captain Zahari Ahmed Shah and “the pilot’s decision to divert the plane and have it disappear into one of the most remote places in the world.”