Flight 370 mystery: ongoing anguish for those left behind
As relatives of the missing passengers become more desperate for answers the Malaysians are becoming more wary of releasing information.
As relatives of the missing passengers become more desperate for answers the Malaysians are becoming more wary of releasing information.
Relatives of passengers on board the missing MH370 are bundled out of a press conference after unfurling a banner in anger about a lack of information and what they see as mixed messages.
Malaysia are said to have asked for top secret data from US spy satellites monitored from Australia, in an attempt to track down the missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370.
Users of the social networking site Reddit said a satellite image posted online appears to show debris from the missing Malaysian Airlines Flight 370.
Chinese relatives demand more information and threaten hunger strike, as Malaysia reveals the search area for the missing plane spans 2.24m square nautical miles.
With the hunt for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370 in its tenth day, the Malaysian government holds a press conference on the latest developments.
Last night Malaysia’s transport minister told me flight MH370’s data communication system had been deliberately disabled before the last verbal communication from the aircraft.
Focus in the hunt for missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370 turns to the pilots, after it is revealed that the plane’s tracking system was turned off before the last verbal message from the cockpit.
A Boeing 777 has seemingly disappeared, along with the 239 people on board. But is Malaysia Airlines more risky? And is it safe to fly at all?
Malaysian police investigate a flight engineer who was aboard the missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370, as evidence mounts that the flight’s disappearance may have been a hijacking or act of sabotage.
Officials confirm to Channel 4 News that the pilot of missing flight MH370 spoke to air traffic control after a data-link system was disabled by someone on board.
The missing Malaysian jet’s communications systems were “deliberately” turned off, confirms the government – but was it a pilot or a passenger? And who flew it seven hours in the wrong direction?
Once again, the Malaysian authorities offer little new information about the search for flight 370 at a well-attended press conference in Kuala Lumpur.
Six days after the disappearance of flight 370, the awkward truth is that we are no closer to discovering what happened to this sophisticated jetliner and the 239 people on board.
From insurance scams to acts of terrorism, missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is shrouded in mystery and conspiracy theories – but what really happened?