Chinese families protest over MH370

Families of MH370's Chinese victims have protested out the foreign ministry in Beijing as they urge the governments to continue the search for the jet.

Malaysia

In this April 4, 2014, file photo of search operations. Source: AAP

Chinese families with loved ones who went missing aboard Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 have protested in Beijing after authorities announced the search for the plane would be suspended.

Transportation ministers for Malaysia, Australia and China said last week the operation would be set aside once an ongoing search of a part of the southern Indian Ocean is complete - a decision that enraged relatives.

"My son is inside the plane. How can such a big plane disintegrate? I know that the plane is intact and leaders are breaking their promises to keep looking until they find answers," said Li Er You, 59, speaking outside the gates of China's foreign ministry in Beijing on Friday.

The Beijing-bound MH370, with 239 people aboard, disappeared on March 8, 2014 nearly an hour after it took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport.

About two dozen relatives stood silently holding protest signs outside the foreign ministry, before meeting with officials to submit their letter of complaint.

Zhang, a mother whose young daughter went missing on the plane, broke down into tears while holding a sign that said the governments needed to fulfil their promises to the world.

"We are very sad and angry about the joint decision made by the three countries. We see no plan for the future on how to continue to search for the truth ... We want to know who should be responsible," the letter said.

Australian Transport Minister Darren Chester had said that it is not viable to continue the search after the current area is completed, so long as there is no new information on the aircraft's whereabouts.

"This decision was not taken lightly nor without sadness, and I want to emphasise that our work is continuing in analysing data, inspecting debris and considering all new information," he said.

So far, only pieces of debris from MH370 have been discovered, in South Africa, Mozambique, Mauritius and Reunion Island. Searchers have yet to find the main wreckage.

On Thursday, Malaysia's chief of police has dismissed claims the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 may have been a pilot murder-suicide.

The pilot murder-suicide angle cropped up anew after a US-based magazine reported last week that an FBI analysis of the data found in the flight simulator owned by flight MH370 Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah showed that he conducted a simulated flight to the Indian Ocean a few weeks before the plane vanished along a similar route.

Earlier in the day news reports quoted Australia's Joint Agency Coordination Centre - which is leading the search in the Indian Ocean - as saying that "the MH370 captain's flight simulator showed someone had plotted a course to the southern Indian Ocean".

Inspector General Khalid Abu Bakar said they have not passed on information to the Federal Bureau of Investigation related to the ongoing probe.

"The investigation is still ongoing and can only be concluded once the (MH370) black box is found and analysed," he told reporters in a press conference after the meeting of police chiefs from the 10-country Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

When asked about the reports that the police is zeroing in on a pilot suicide-murder angle Khalid said: "It is not true."

But Khalid declined to confirm or deny reports about the flight path found in Zaharie's flight simulator.


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Source: AAP


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