"HEY!
Where's that plane?
“Don't
worry about ocean depletion and acidification, Anthropogenic climate
change, drought, fracking, deforestation, poverty, resource
depletion, global corporate Capitalism, environmental ecocide, animal
testing, abuse and murder, CAFO torture, GMOs, Worldwide war,
Imperialism, overpopulation and overshoot!"
Where's that plane?”
---Jenelle Green
Well, it looks as if they might have pinpointed the rescue. But I'm sure they'll be able to keep this going with conspiracy theories about what happened.
And they accuse US of being conspiracy theroists!!
Flight 370: Families told plane is 'lost with no survivors'
Teams searching for wreckage from missing flight MH370 are expected to pinpoint objects spotted by an Australian crew, as new satellite analysis confirmed the Malaysia Airlines plane had plunged into the southern Indian Ocean.
25
March, 2014
Malaysian
Prime Minister Najib Razak told a press conference in Kuala Lumpur
late last night that new data showed the plane, carrying 239 people,
had crashed into the ocean west of Perth after going missing more
than two weeks ago.
"Based
on new analysis we have concluded [the jet] flew along southern
corridor and that its last position was in the middle of Indian Ocean
west of Perth.
"This
is a remote location far from any possible landing site.
"It
is therefore with deep sadness and regret that I must inform that in
accordance with this new data Flight MH370 ended in the southern
Indian Ocean."
Mr
Najib said he had been briefed by representatives from the UK Air
Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB), which informed him that
satellite data from the UK company Inmarsat, using techniques "never
before used in an investigation of this sort", revealed the
final position of the plane.
The
International search effort was expected today to zero in on an area
where two objects had been sighted by an Australian crew the day
before.
Prime
Minister Tony Abbott told parliament yesterday evening that a Royal
Australian Air Force P3 Orion had located two objects, a grey or
green circular object and an orange rectangular object.
The
HMAS Success is in the area, about 2500km southwest of Perth, and
attempting to recover the objects.
A
US Navy P8 Poseidon, a second RAAF Orion and a Japanese Orion are
also en route to try to find the items.
Malaysian
authorities say the objects could be retrieved "by (Tuesday)
morning at the latest''.
The
most recent sightings have followed suspected plane debris being
picked up by Australian, Chinese and French satellites.
Flight
370 vanished on March 8 just an hour into its journey from Kuala
Lumpur to Beijing, carrying 239 people, including six Australians and
two New Zealanders.
How
relatives were told
Relatives
of passengers and crew have been told of the "heartbreaking''
news that flight went down in southern Indian Ocean.
Moments
before the Prime Minister's press conference, officials from Malaysia
Airlines sent an SMS text message to the families of the passengers
on board when the plane was lost which said: "We must now accept
all evidence suggests the plane went down in the Southern Indian
Ocean".
"Malaysia
Airlines deeply regrets that we have to assume beyond any reasonable
doubt that MH370 has been lost and that none of those on board
survived," the message read.
"Malaysia
Airlines has already spoken to the family of the passengers and crew
to inform them of this development," Mr Najib said.
"For
them the past few weeks have been heartbreaking. I know this news
must be hard as well."
Bad
weather to hamper search
Earlier,
the Malaysia transport minister, Hishammuddin Hussein, said an
Australian naval ship could locate possible debris within hours.
The
Australian Maritime Safety Authority (Amsa) confirmed that the HMAS
Success had made its way out to the remote search area some 2,500km
from Perth, and that the objects were seen within the stretch of
water being scoured today.
"HMAS
Success is on scene and is attempting to locate and recover these
objects," Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said in a
statement to parliament.
However,
New Zealand Air Force Air Commodore Mike Yardley said bad weather
could significantly hamper those efforts.
The
weather system approaching the search area will bring "significantly"
bad weather, he told TV3's Firstline this morning.
"We've
got a bad front coming through with north-west gales as I understand,
so the sea state is going to rise and that means it'll be very
difficult conditions today for our visual look-outs and also
challenging for our radar," he said.
"I
understand in fact that the weather might be so difficult the
Australian authorities are now telling us that they don't think
[HMAS] Success will now be in a position to collect any of this
debris even if we find it."
So
far, ships in the search effort have been unable to locate several
"suspicious" objects spotted by satellites in grainy images
or by fast-flying aircraft over a vast search area in the remote
southern Indian Ocean.
Earlier
on Monday spotters on a Chinese plane said they had seen two white,
square-shaped objects in the southern Indian Ocean, at that stage the
second possible sighting of plane debris made with the naked eye in
the search for the missing Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777.
Spotters
aboard that search plane reported the coordinates to a Chinese
icebreaker ship, Xue Long, which was making its way to the area - as
well as to the central Australian command centre.
In
addition to the two larger floating objects, the searchers also
reported seeing a range of smaller, white debris scattered over
several square miles, according to China's Xinhua news agency.
The
sightings were all made in the area identified in previous satellite
images from Australia and China.
The
developments came as the US prepared to send a specialised device
that can locate black boxes into the region.
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