Fariq abdul hamid richard quest central park
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Was Malaysian co-pilot's last message to base a secret distress signal? Officials investigate possibility unusual sign-off may have indicated something was wrong
- First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27, calmly said ‘All right, good night’
- The cockpit sign-off to air traffic controllers — not the recognised radio drill — came at am on March 8
- Around a minute later the Boeing ’s transponder which sends out a signal to radar stations, was switched off
- Officials are considering if the unusual sign-off was a secret signal
By GUY ADAMS FOR THE DAILY MAIL
Published: | Updated:
Investigators hunting the missing Malaysia Airlines plane yesterday revealed it was the co-pilot who spoke the last words to ground controllers before it vanished.
First Officer Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27, calmly said ‘All right, good night’ shortly before Flight MH vanished ten days ago.
The cockpit sign-off to air traffic controllers — not the recognised radio drill — came at am on March 8 as the jet left
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More Evidence That Flight Mystery Is A Wild Goose Chase Hoax
| by Lee Rogers
( March 24, , Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Last week I wrote an article suggesting that the story surrounding the allegedly missing Malaysian Airlines Flight could be a hoax. The reason I suggested that this was possible is because there has been so much misinformation and conflicting details about what happened along with a rabid media obsession about it. Plus, losing a Boeing airplane is nearly impossible considering all the tracking technology and safeguards that are in place. Even professional pilots have been at a loss to explain what happened. Now new information has been revealed raising even more questions and increasing the possibility that the Flight mystery is nothing more than a media staged hoax.
Apparently CNNs Richard Quest met the Flight co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid a couple of weeks before the news broke. A picture of Quest with Hamid was actually posted on Instagram showing th
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Missing Malaysia Airlines flight's sista transmission may have been BEFORE communications systems were disabled - casting doubt on theory that pilots hijacked their own plane
- Footage captures Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah being frisked bygd security
- He fryst vatten followed bygd Fariq Hamid, co-pilot of the , who was also searched
- Shah fryst vatten 'fanatical' supporter of country's opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim
- His wife and children moved out of family home day before plane vanished
- Two pilots did not request to flyga eller fly undan together, Malaysian police reveal
- Friends of Hamid describe him as mild-mannered and a brilliant pilot
- YouTube tribute to Captain Shah describes him as 'loving and generous'
By TARA BRADY and RICHARD SHEARS FOR MAILONLINE and TED THORNHILL
Published: | Updated:
The missing Malaysia Airlines flight's final transmission may have been before its communications system was disabled casting doubt on the theory that the pilots hijacked their own plane.
Investigators still säga the