Isteri juruterbang MH370 bersuara, sahkan suara Zaharie dari kokpit, lapor akhbar...
Lebih tiga bulan selepas kehilangan pesawat Malaysia Airlines (MAS) MH370, isteri juruterbang Kapten Zaharie Ahmad Shah akhirnya bersuara.
Faizah Khan memberitahu dua wartawan New Zealand yang menulis buku berkenaan kapal terbang hilang itu, suara semasa ucapan terakhir dari penerbangan itu adalah milik suaminya Zaharie, lapor akhbar harian di United Kingdom, The Telegraph hari ini.
Beliau berkata anak sulungnya mengenal pasti suara yang mengeluarkan kata-kata “sign-off” akhir adalah bapanya.
Pada mulanya didedahkan para pegawai Malaysia sehari selepas kehilangan penerbangan MH370 bahawa kata-kata akhir dari kokpit adalah "Allright, goodnight", dan ia dikatakan oleh pembantu juruterbang Fariq Abdul Hamid.
Bagaimanapun pada 31 Mac, Jabatan Penerbangan Awam (DCA) mendedahkan kata-kata terakhir "Selamat malam Malaysia tiga tujuh kosong", dan tidak dapat dipastikan sama ada suara itu milik juruterbang atau pembantu juruterbang.
Panggilan dibuat dari kokpit kepada pengawal trafik udara di Kuala Lumpur semasa pesawat berada di Laut China Selatan dan meninggalkan ruang udara Malaysia, kurang daripada satu jam selepas berlepas.
Penerbangan MH370 dengan 239 orang penumpang dan anak kapal hilang kira-kira sejam selepas berlepas dari Kuala Lumpur, tidak lama selepas tengah malam pada 8 Mac, menuju ke Beijing, di mana ia dijadualkan tiba pada pukul 6.30 pagi, hari yang sama.
Menurut The Telegraph, Geoff Taylor, timbalan pengarang Waikato Times New Zealand, beliau dan pengarang bersama, Ewan Wilson bercakap dengan adik ipar Zaharie, Asuad Khan di Pulau Pinang dan kemudian isteri juruterbang berusia 53 tahun itu.
Asuad pada mulanya mendakwa suara dari kokpit bukan milik Zaharie tetapi selepas memanggil kakaknya di hadapan kedua-dua wartawan, beliau mengesahkan suara itu milik suaminya.
"Dalam tempoh lebih kurang tiga bulan, sejak penerbangan hilang, tiada media berjaya mendapatkan kenyataan daripada isteri Zaharie itu," kata Taylor yang dipetik oleh The Telegraph.
"Kami bernasib baik berjaya mendapatkan pengesahan daripada dia bahawa Zaharie adalah individu yang berada dalam kokpit."
Dilaporkan pada Ahad oleh sebuah lagi akhbar UK, The Sunday Times, Zaharie kekal sebagai suspek utama kehilangan pesawat MH370.
Sambil menambah, kegagalan mekanikal atau keganasan tidak dapat diketepikan, akhbar itu berkata polis percaya jika ia tindakan manusia, kapten adalah pelaku yang paling berkemungkinan.
Laporan itu, yang juga disiarkan dalam The Australian, berkata polis cawangan khas Malaysia memberi tumpuan siasatan terhadap Zaharie selepas pemeriksaan perisikan gagal menemui sebarang bukti mencurigakan pada orang lain di dalam pesawat itu.
Laporan memetik seorang jurucakap polis Malaysia berkata: "Siasatan polis masih lagi dijalankan. Setakat ini tiada kesimpulan yang boleh dibuat tentang punca kepada insiden dan ia akan menjadi sub judice untuk berkata demikian. Bagaimanapun, pihak polis masih mencari meneliti semua sudut yang berkemungkinan."
Pemangku Menteri Pengangkutan Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein menolak laporan The Sunday Times dengan memberitahu media tempatan bahawa "kita tidak perlu melayan teori konspirasi".
Ketua Polis Negara Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar juga mengkritik laporan akhbar UK itu, mengulangi bahawa sebarang kenyataan mengenai siasatan ke atas kehilangan penerbangan MH370 akan datang secara langsung daripada pihak polis dan bukan melalui media asing. ~tmi
MH370 pilot’s wife breaks silence, confirms Zaharie’s voice from cockpit, says The Telegraph...
More than three months after the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, the wife of the pilot Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah has finally broken her silence.
Faizah Khan told two New Zealand journalists who are writing a book about the missing plane, that the voice behind the final sign off that came from the flight was that of her husband Zaharie, UK daily The Telegraph reported today.
She said that her eldest son had identified the voice which delivered the final sign-off as that of his father.
It was initially revealed by Malaysian officials days after the disappearance of flight MH370 that the final words from the cockpit were "Allright, goodnight", and that it was spoken by the co-pilot First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid.
However, on March 31, the Department of Civial Aviation revealed that the last words were "Good night Malaysian three seven zero", and that it was not sure if the voice was that of the pilot or the co-pilot.
The call was made from the cockpit to air traffic controllers in Kuala Lumpur while the aircraft was over the South China Sea and leaving Malaysian air space, less than an hour after take-off.
Flight MH370 with 239 people on board vanished about an hour after departing Kuala Lumpur, shortly after midnight on March 8, heading for Beijing, where it was scheduled to have arrived at 6.30am the same day.
According to The Telegraph, Geoff Taylor, deputy editor of New Zealand's Waikato Times, said he and his co-author Ewan Wilson spoke to Zaharie's brother-in-law Asuad Khan in Penang and then to the 53-year-old pilot's wife.
Asuad had initially claimed the voice from the cockpit was not Zaharie's but after calling his sister in the presence of the two journalists, she confirmed the voice belonged to her husband.
"In the three months-plus since the flight went down no one in the media has been able to get close to Zaharie's widow," Taylor was quoted as saying by The Telegraph.
"We were lucky to get confirmation from her that it was him who was at the helm."
It was reported on Sunday by another UK paper, The Sunday Times, that Zaharie remains a prime suspect over the disappearance of the plane.
Adding that mechanical failure or terrorism has not been ruled out, the paper said the police believed that if it was the result of human action, the captain was the most likely perpetrator.
The report, which was also carried in The Australian, said Malaysia's special branch had focused the inquiry on Zaharie after intelligence checks failed to substantiate any suspicions about the other people on board the aircraft.
The reports quoted a spokesman for the Malaysian police as saying: “The police investigation is still ongoing. To date no conclusions can be made as to the contributor to the incident and it would be sub judice to say so. Nevertheless, the police are still looking into all possible angles.”
Acting Transport Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein rejected the report from The Sunday Times telling local media that "we should not entertain conspiracy theories".
The Inspector-General of Police also criticised the UK paper for its coverage, reiterating that any statement on the investigation over the disappearance of flight MH370 will come directly from the police and not through foreign media. – tmi
Jam 12.00 pagi 25/6/2014
Jam 4.00 pagi 25/6/2014
cheers.
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