Vladimir Putin KNOWS where missing Malaysia
flight MH370 is VLADIMIR Putin knows exactly missing Malaysian
Airlines flight MH370 is, an investigator has claimed. Andre Milne, a volunteer investigator and
founder of defence technology company Unicorn Aerospace, says there is evidence the Russian
leader was aware of the planes location hours after it went missing. The jumbo-jet vanished in March 2014 en route
from Malaysias Kuala Lumpur Airport to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew on board. Mr Milne believes the aircraft made a soft
ditch landing in the Bay of Bengal, which forms the northeastern part of the Indian
Ocean.
But he thinks the Russian government is aware
of exactly where the Boeing 777 went down because it was picked up by a satellite. He said: Satellites that were placed by
the Russians saw the wreckage. This satellite information was discovered
52 hours after MH370 went missing. Putin would have been given that information
and he would have said, lets get that information out there." But Mr Milne, who set up a 1.3Million appeal
to search the Bay of Bengal, believes the Russians got cold feet about going public
with their find.
He believes this is because it was one of
Russias "spy" satellites that detected the doomed airliner. Mr Milne explained: Putin has just had
the Olympics, is just making his way onto the world stage, so he was highly sensitive
to not wanting to be seen offending anyone. The reason President Putin did not raise
his hand and march in and say we found it is because technically he would have been
admitting committing espionage. Mr Milne says there is satellite data to prove
his extraordinary claim and says if a search party went to the Bay of Bengal, they would
find wreckage with no flaperon on the sea floor.
He states that witness statements also corroborate
his theory, including numerous people who say they saw a plane flying at an incredibly
low altitude over the Indian Ocean the night it went missing. One of these sightings came from a British
sailor who says she saw a burning aircraft over the Indian Ocean that night. Just days ago, the Australian Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) said it was confident it has
found the crash site. The agency claimed the plane is in an area
25,000 sq km north of the original 120,000 sq km search zone.
But in a twist that was likely to anger victims
relatives, the governments of Malaysia, China and Australia said there is not enough evidence
to begin a new search..
No comments:
Post a Comment