Flight MH370: Specialist claims to have solved the mystery of the missing plane and located the “perfect hideout”

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A scientist claims that she may have “solved” the mystery of her missing aircraft a decade after it disappeared. Ten years of the largest air mystery haunting hundreds of families for 10 years, an expert is fortified to locate the “perfect hiding place” of Malaysia Airlines’ MH370 flight. Vincent Lyne, an assistant researcher at the University of Tasmania, believes that the available data on the flight’s disappearance suggests that the pilot, Zaharie Ahmad Shah, deliberately threw the plane into a deep “hole” of 6,000 metres deep in the Broken Ridge of the Indian Ocean. Lyne, who works at the University’s Institute of Marine and Antarctic Studies, described Broken Ridge as “a very rough and dangerous ocean environment… with narrow steep sides, surrounded by huge ridges and other deep holes.” “It is filled with fine sediments – a perfect “hiding”, suggesting that the pilot, Zaharie Ahmad Shah, deliberately threw the plane, on which 239 people were aboard at the time. Lyne wrote in Linkedin: “This study changes the account of MH370’s disappearance from a narrative without any guilt, with a lack of fuel in the 7th arc, with a high-speed dip, to a genius pilot who almost performed an incredible perfect extinction in the southern Indian Ocean”. “In fact, it would have succeeded if MH370 did not cross with its right wing a wave and if regular interrogation satellite communications were not discovered by Inmarsat – a brilliant discovery also announced in the Journal of Navigation”. He wrote that damage to the plane’s wings shows similarities to those of the plane that Governor Chesley Sullenberger successfully landed on the Hudson River in 2009. Time of lost flight Malaysia Airlines’ plane disappeared on March 8, 2014, with 239 passengers, (227 passengers and 12 crew members), all considered dead. The aircraft took off from Kuala Lumpur airport bound for Beijing. But 38 minutes after the takeoff of Boeing 777, the signal disappears. The plane is being lost to radar and no one knows exactly what has happened. The only clue is that his pilot is trying a few minutes before the disappearance to change course. In 2018 the official investigation into the incident was made public, however, its conclusions do not shed light on the causes of the disappearance of flight MH370. The only evidence is some fragments found on the ocean coast and are believed to belong to it. There are many theories about what happened on the plane, with many of the search attempts focusing on the sea and trying to figure out where the aircraft might have fallen based on the debris washed up. One of them wants pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, to cause deliberate crash of flight MH370 in a murder-suicide, which he committed due to problems in his personal life. Shah was allegedly divorced with his wife Fizah Khan who however refused angry any personal problems, while other family members and friends stated that he was a devoted family man and loved his work. However, Lyne says that evidence suggests that the pilot deliberately threw the plane, saying that “it justifies beyond any doubt the initial claim, based on specialized and very careful analyses of debris damage from Canada’s decorated former air accident chief Larry Vance, that the MH-370 had fuel and engines in operation when it suffered a masterful “controlled sinking” rather than a crash with high speed and fuel shortage.” Information From