Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, carrying 239 individuals, mysteriously disappeared on March 8, 2014, during a routine flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, leaving the global community in shock.
Recent scientific revelations indicate that the aircraft maintained intermittent communication with a satellite for six hours after vanishing from radar, suggesting it continued flying at high speeds and altitudes.
Radar data reveals that after disappearing, MH370 made a sudden maneuver southwest, circled around Penang Island, and headed northwest before vanishing over the Andaman Sea, raising questions about the nature of the incident.
Investigators have uncovered that the aircraft’s trajectory included a significant southward turn towards Antarctica, with Doppler data indicating a steep descent into the ocean, possibly due to catastrophic failure.
Theories surrounding the disappearance include potential deliberate actions by the captain, with parallels drawn to past incidents where pilots intentionally crashed aircraft.
Reports from families of passengers indicate that some received ringing tones from their loved ones’ phones days after the alleged crash, challenging the narrative that the plane sank into the ocean.
Speculations about the plane being shot down during military exercises or targeted due to miscommunication have emerged, but lack substantial evidence, leaving the fate of MH370 shrouded in mystery.