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The landing gear on missing flight MH370 was down, suggesting the pilot may have deliberately crashed into the sea to sink the jet quickly, experts have claimed.
Theories have been circulating ever since the Malaysian Airlines passenger jet went down somewhere over the Indian Ocean with 239 people on-board in March 2014.
The most persistent theory has centred on the pilot - Zaharie Ahmad Shahand - and suggestions that it was a deliberate act.
Last month, a landing gear door was found in the possession of a Madagascan fisherman. According to experts, it is the first piece of evidence to be found to suggest one of the Malaysian Airlines pilots acted deliberately.
The landing gear on missing flight MH370 was down, suggesting the pilot may have deliberately crashed into the sea to sink the jet quickly, experts have claimed. Pictured: Malaysia Airlines fight MH370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah (file photo)
The door has been identified as a component of a Boeing 777, known as a trunnion door. It likely penetrated the inside of the aircraft's disintegrating engines.
This, experts have said, makes it highly probable that the landing gear was down when the aircraft crashed into the ocean, The Times has reported.
Officials did not announce the finding of the crucial piece of evidence until Monday, but it has already prompted calls for further a further investigation into the March 8, 2014 disappearance of the aircraft and that of its 12 Malaysian crew members, and its 227 passengers who hailed from 14 different countries. All are presumed dead.
The Boeing 777 vanished from radar screens as it was flying from Kuala Lumpar to Beijing. The plane took an unexpected U-turn from its planned flight path and was instead tracked on military radar over the Malacca Strait before losing contact.
After years of questions over the cause, analysis by Richard Godfrey, a British engineer, and Blaine Gibson, an American who searches for MH370 wreckage, has suggested the plane was crashed quickly, and with deliberate intention.
Last month, a landing gear door was found in the possession of a Madagascan fisherman. According to experts, it is the first piece of evidence to be found to suggest one of the Malaysian Airlines pilots acted deliberately. Pictured: Malaysian Minister of Transport, Anthony Loke (C) looks at the Wing flap found on Pemba Island, Tanzania in 2019 (file photo)
Should an airliner be forced to make an emergency water landing, pilots are trained to keep landing gear retracted for a controlled, low-speed impact.
This was achieved by US airline captain Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger who heroically landed an Airbus on New York's Hudson river in 2009.
Pilots would not, however, have the landing gear extended. This would cause a violent impact with the surface of the water and increase the risk of the plane breaking up upon impact - dramatically decreasing chances of survival.
The experts have now said, based on the new evidence, that the flaps on MH370 are not believed to have been retracted when it landed in the southern Indian Ocean.
By deliberately extending the landing gear, one of the pilots likely caused the immediate break-up of the aircraft's fuselage. This would also have increased the chances of the airline sinking quickly, The Times reported.
This would have given any survivors limited time to evacuate the plane.
'The combination of the high speed impact designed to break up the aircraft and the extended landing gear designed to sink the aircraft as fast as possible both show a clear intent to hide the evidence of the crash,' the newspaper quoted the researchers as saying in their report.
The Boeing 777 vanished from radar screens as it was flying from Kuala Lumpar to Beijing on March 8, 2014, resulting in the loss of all 239 people on board
Pictured: A map showing the location of flight MH370 before it dropped off the radar. Further military detection suggested the plane may have headed north-west over the Northern Malacca Strait, however this has not been confirmed
Mr Godfrey has previously said pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah deliberately changed direction and speed to avoid 'giving a clear idea where he was heading'.
'In case the aircraft was detected, the pilot also avoided giving a clear idea where he was heading by using a flight path with a number of changes of direction,' Mr Godfrey said in a separate report last year.
His latest findings only add to the theory that one of the pilots was behind the disappearance of the airliner. Friends of Mr Shah claim the pilot was 'lonely and sad' and was believed to be 'clinically depressed'.
Mr Shah was a 53-year-old experience pilot, from Penang. His co-pilot, Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27, had joined Malaysian Airlines seven years earlier.
Shah was married with children, and was an outspoken critic of Malaysia's president at the time. Police investigating the pilot found he had used his home computer to run a simulation of a replica Boeing 777 flight across the Indian Ocean a month earlier - something that was withheld by Malaysia from a public report.
In total, 36 pieces of MH370 wreckage have been recovered - many by Mr Gibson. Of those 36, nineteen were found washed ashore in Madagascar.
The latest piece - a 32 inch by 28 inch landing gear door - appears to match those used on Boeing 777 planes, according to The Times.
The fisherman named Tataly - who found it in 2017 near his home on the Antsiraka Peninsula in Madagascar - was unaware of the item's significance, and it has been used as a washing board by his wife since its discovery.