Mystery of the aircraft MH370: important questions about the missing Malaysia Airlines aircraft. After all where is it still lost

 The MH370 remains a mystery to this day, but a documentary highlights three major questions that need to be answered.


Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing on 8 March 2014, carrying 239 people on the route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. The official investigation concluded that it most likely ended at the bottom of the southern Indian Ocean, but two costly attempts of search in the suspect area came up empty-handed. Without recovering the black box flight information recorder, there are some big questions that remain for the plane and everyone on board.



According to a lawyer representing some of them, the families have been left heartbroken by the "permanent nightmare".

The 2019 Channel 5 documentary 'Flight MH370' presented three major questions about the place.

These are the questions: “Who was in the cockpit? Who was piloting the aircraft? And why does it go to such extraordinary lengths to literally go extinct? "

The first of these questions can be answered by retrieving the black box, one of which is the cockpit voice recorder, which stores audio from the cockpit in the hours before the disaster. The

second question can also be reported by finding out, However the search missions tried to find the wreckage and were unsuccessful.

The third question is currently almost unfounded - investigators believe the disappearance was not an accident and that the plane was hijacked by someone who has experience flying, but they have no clue what to do. Is not.

If it was a terrorist attack, why did no organization claim responsibility?

Instead of telling the world that the hijackers have carefully designed a passage, which means they can disappear without a trace.

The only way investigators even concluded that the aircraft was in the Indian Ocean was using data from the aircraft's communications with a satellite and a technique to analyze data that had never been used before.

Aviation Journalist David Lairmount suggested that it might be the whole thing to confuse the world.

He explained: “I believe that what happened with this airplane was not an accident, it was a plan.

"It was then done by someone on board.