The massive international
search for the missing Malaysian airliner is likely widen into the Indian Ocean
with the U.S. deploying a ship to the Andaman Sea to locate the airliner.
The move came after the
U.S.’ defence and aviation experts noted that there was a significant
probability of the plane to be at the bottom of the Indian Ocean.
India along with U.S.
Navy’s P-3C Orion maritime surveillance aircraft with long-range radar and
communication capabilities will search in the Andaman Sea west of the Malacca
Strait.
“The U.S. P-3 will search
west of the Strait of Malacca in the Andaman Sea,” Lt. Col. Jeffrey Pool, a
Pentagon spokesman said.
USS Kidd is now transiting
from the Strait of Malacca to the Indian Ocean, the U.S. Navy said, referring
to a guided-missile destroyer initially deployed to the Gulf of Thailand.
“It’s my understanding
that based on some new information that’s not necessarily conclusive, but new
information, an additional search area may be opened in the Indian Ocean, and
we are consulting with international partners about the appropriate assets to
deploy,” White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters.
“It is frustrating for
everyone, but agonising for the families of those passengers on the flight,” he
said.
“It is my understanding
that one possible piece of information or collection of pieces of information
has led to the possibility that a new area, a search area may be opened in the
Indian Ocean,” he added.
A senior American official
said the information that the plane may have flown for four hours after
dropping from radar came from a data stream sent directly by engines aboard
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, the Washington Post reported.
If the two engines on the
Boeing 777 functioned for up to four additional hours, that could strengthen
concern that a rogue pilot or hijacker took control of the plane early Saturday
over the Gulf of Thailand, it said.
Meanwhile, The Wall Street
Journal said communication satellites received intermittent data “pings” from a
missing Malaysia Airlines jet, giving the plane’s location, speed and altitude
for at least five hours after it disappeared from civilian radar screens.
The final satellite ping
was sent from over water, at what one of these people called a “normal”
cruising altitude.
Noting that it is unclear
why the transmissions stopped, the daily reported that one possibility could be
that the system sending them had been disabled by someone on board.
The flight MH370 was
carrying 227 passengers, including five Indians and one Indian-origin Canadian,
and 12 crew members when it mysteriously vanished from radar screens an hour
after taking off from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing last week.
Thailand puts Iranian
ticket booker on wanted list
Thailand has placed an
Iranian man who allegedly booked the tickets for two men using forged passports
on the missing Malaysia Airlines flight on its wanted list, news reports said
on Friday.
Alireza Kolmoham,
identified as the man who booked tickets through a Pattaya tour agency for two
Iranians on flight MH370 who used passports lost in Thailand by Italian and
Austrian tourists, has been placed on the country’s list of wanted criminals, the
Bangkok Post reported.
“Our police have his
profile and passport photo. He can’t avoid being caught if he re-appears in
Thailand,” said Immigration Bureau Chief Police Lieutenant General Phamu
Kerdlarpphon.
Kolmoham, 39, a frequent
visitor to Thailand who has been booking tickets for customers through the
Grand Horizon tour agency in Pattaya for at least three years, is under
investigation for links with criminal gangs supplying fake passports to
international human trafficking groups, the newspaper said.
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