We are being told TODAY that Flight 370 crashed into the Indian Ocean – this with no actual evidence…. maybe we will find Osama Bin Laden floating nearby?
Via Daily Mail -
- Both men pictured boarded missing Flight 370 with stolen passports
- Fears pictures were doctored as both of the men have the same legs
- Trousers, shoes, and shadows all identical, but upper bodies are different
- Chinese aircraft spots ‘suspicious objects’ in Indian Ocean
- More images of debris adrift in the Indian Ocean were released
- French satellite image taken 850km from current search zone
- Australia-led operation ‘clutching’ at any new information
- Search continues but so far no wreckage has been recovered
Fears of a cover-up over the fate of flight MH370 grew yesterday after claims that a photo of two passengers was tampered with.
Images of two men who boarded the Malaysian Airlines jet with stolen passports appear to show them having the same set of legs.
CCTV footage stills released by officials three days after the Boeing 777-200 vanished from the skies shows the pair with identical green trousers and brown shoes.
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Spot the similarity: The legs of these two men, named as 19-year-old Pouria Nour Mohammad Mehrdad (left), and Delavar Seyed Mohammadreza, 29, (right), appear identical, leading to suspicions of tampering
Their feet and shadows are also in the same position, while their faces, T-shirts and bags are different.
The photo last night fuelled conspiracy theories over the fate of the aircraft, which disappeared with 239 passengers and crew more than a fortnight ago.
One Twitter user wrote: ‘They both have the same legs, edited or coincidence? And you guys believe our gov is not hiding anything.’
Malaysian police admitted the image of one man had been placed on top of the other when they were photocopied.
But a spokesman said it was not ‘done with malice or to mislead’.
The men – thought to be Iranian asylum-seekers – have been named as Pouria Nour Mohammad Mehrdad, 19, and 29-year-old Delavar Seyed Mohammadreza.
They travelled to Malaysia on Iranian passports before switching to stolen Austrian and Italian documents.
ALSO:
Police seize bank data of all 12 crew members from missing flight MH370
23 Mar 2014 France today provided Malaysia with satellite images of objects that could be from a passenger jet that went missing more than two weeks ago. The pictures are thought to have been taken close to areas of the Indian Ocean where Australia and China provided satellite photographs of objects that could be debris from MH370. And an image of solid matter floating in the southern Indian Ocean was released, as seen from a Royal New Zealand Air Force P-3K2 Orion aircraft searching for the flight. Meanwhile, it was claimed that police have seized the personal financial records of all 12 crew members of the flight MH370 – including bank statements, mortgage documents and credit card bills.
Transcript of final 54 minutes from MH370 flight deck begs question: Was it STOLEN in two minutes of ‘dead space?’
22 Mar 2014 Missing flight MH370 could have been stolen in ‘dead space’ as it passed from Malaysian to Vietnamese air traffic control, supposed transcripts of its last known hour claim. The moment the jet veered westwards was at the point of handover, according to the leaked document – when it could have been invisible to ground control, making the timing perfect for hijack. Former British Airways pilot Stephen Buzdygan said: ‘If I was going to steal the aeroplane, that would be the point I would do it’. But today Malaysia’s defence minister slammed the transcript as inaccurate and said the real version ‘does not indicate anything abnormal’.
More planes joining search for missing Malaysian airliner –Sunday searches more visual, less technical 23,
24 Mar 2014 On Sunday, eight airplanes will fly over the southern Indian Ocean searching for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, said Australian Maritime Safety Authority spokeswoman Andrea Hayward-Maher. 24 March update: The search for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane resumed Monday morning, with additional aircraft joining the operation, Australian authorities said. The Australian Maritime Safety Authority said 10 aircraft will search for possible objects in an area about 2,500 kilometers (1,550 miles) southwest of Perth. France’s Foreign Ministry said Sunday that radar data from a satellite pointed to floating debris in the Indian Ocean 2,300 kilometers (1,430 miles) from Perth, Australia.
Read more: London Daily Mail