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Malaysia knows where the wreckage of doomed flight MH370 is but refuses to acknowledge the 'shameful truth' about the crash, Australia's leading aviation expert says.
Geoffrey Thomas, a 50-year aviation industry veteran, said the Malaysia Airlines plane's remains lie 1,933km due west of Perth after experts traced the final flightpath of the plane.
Mr Thomas said aerospace engineer Richard Godfrey has tracked the route of plane using radio waves and believes 'one more search in 2024' will reveal its final resting place.
Analysis of the plane's final moments and the recovered debris found the pilot was 'was pushing down on the control column' to crash the plane in a high-speed dive, designed to 'ensure the aircraft broke up into as many pieces as possible'.
Mr Thomas said the decade of speculation since the plane vanished had left relatives of the victims 'on a ghastly rollercoaster ride as ridiculous theories are floated'.
'What the MH370 crash was, is pilot suicide and mass murder of the worst kind, because no-one could escape,' he told Daily Mail Australia.
But Mr Thomas said the Malaysian government has previously refused to instigate a fresh search and the pilot's family had rejected 'what obviously happened'.
Captain Zaharie had built his own flight simulator in a bedroom on which investigators found the doomed MH370 flight path he'd tested then wiped before March 7, 2014
The diverted flight path of MH370 flew almost seven hours south and crashed into the sea 'in a high-speed dive designed to ensure the aircraft broke up into as many pieces as possible'
On Monday, Malaysian Transport Minister Loke Siew Fook finally announced the country may renew the hunt for the missing plane, which disappeared 10 years ago.
It comes after growing international concern among aviation and aerospace experts that Malaysia was refusing to revive the search which was halted in 2018, even though it had been offered a 'no-find, no-fee' proposal by a US marine search company.
The Malaysia Airlines flight departed for Beijing from Kuala Lumpur on the evening of March 7, 2014 but diverted from its planned flight path and turned south before it vanished.
The plane, carrying 227 passengers including seven Australians, and 12 crew, is believed to have crashed into the Indian Ocean.
It was later revealed the pilot Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah had practised the flight on his own home-made flight simulator, and had been having well-documented mental and marital problems, said Mr Thomas.
He was also openly ranting against the Malaysian government on Facebook and sending obsessive, sexualised messages to a pair of twin sister models aged in their 20s.
'The pilot committed suicide obviously. He flew the same route that he had taken on his own flight simulator, going off the standard route and flying due south,' Mr Thomas said.
'(Captain Zaharie) wiped it off his simulator, but the Malaysians recovered it. My understanding is Malaysia Airlines knew that night that the captain was responsible.
'He had exhibited all sorts of strange tendencies - he was stalking the models, posting anti-government stuff on Facebook.
'No country wants to own an air crash. It's a massive dent to their national pride, and no-one wants to own a suicide.'
Debris from the MH370 crash formed a trail across the Indian Ocean, washing up on islands like Reunion and Madagascar and the coast of eastern Africa
Zaharie was obsessed with twin sister Malaysian models Qi Min Lan and Lan Qi Hui, then 26, begging them to come to Kuala Lumpur and sending creepy comments on Facebook
Mr Thomas said Zaharie's rabid political rants in the year leading up to the MH370 disaster should have seen him fired.
'It should have raised serious alarm bells with the airline that you have someone flying who has such strong anti-government views,' he said.
'If a Qantas pilot did something like that, he would be spoken to and grounded.
‘In 50 years [as an aviation expert] I’ve covered 10 pilot suicides – there’s been 13 or 14 of major aircraft, and usually you have the most monumental cover-up.
'I don't think the Malaysians want to find MH370 and wish it would go away.'
Australian Prime Minister at the time, Tony Abbott, said top Malaysian officials believed Captain Zaharie had deliberately downed the jet soon after it vanished.
UK aerospace engineer Richard Godfrey has charted MH370's flight path once it was hijacked by the captain and flown until it ran out of fuel and crashed into the Indian Ocean
Aishah Zaharie (pictured with her father, Zaharie Ahmad Shah, pilot of MH370) left Australia after the crash and did not respond to inquiries about the disaster 10 years on
'My very clear understanding, from the very top levels of the Malaysian government, is that from very early on, they thought it was murder-suicide by the pilot,' Mr Abbott said.
A Malaysian-led investigation in 2018 said the plane’s course was changed manually but did not name a suspect, and said the cause of the disappearance couldn’t be determined until the wreckage and the plane’s black boxes are found.
Mr Thomas said it was uncertain if they would be operational after 10 years on the ocean floor, and there was an urgent need to find them now that Mr Godfrey had charted Captain Zaharie fatal flight path.
Mr Godfrey, former lead engineer for the European Space Agency Spacelab, tracked the flight path using weak radio signals continually produced by amateur radio operators that cover the earth.
The technology, known as 'weak signal propagation report' or WSPR, used the radio waves as 'electronic tripwires' that triggered invisible signals when aircraft crossed them.
Mr Thomas said that since 2009 a record of all the waves has been kept on an international data base.
'If you go back to March 8, 2014 you can start tracking MH370 by the disturbance,' he said.
Richard Godfrey's report tracks MH370 from take-off, on its accepted flight path to the point where it was nearing Vietnamese air space when the plane dropped out of contact, and then for the six-and-a-half hours it flew until it crashed into the sea.
Captain Zaharie with his wife Faizah Khan (above) was said by a 777 pilot friend to be in a fragile emotional state with his marriage crumbling in the months before the disaster
MH370's remains lie 1933km due west of Perth at a depth of 4,000m in a very mountainous area with deep ravines and a volcano according to Richard Godfrey's analysis
Leading aviation expert Geoffrey Thomas said the MH370 next of kin ''have been on a ghastly roller coaster ride' since the crash and it was up to the Malaysian government to acknowledge the truth
An hour into the flight Zaharie spoke the last words the world would hear from MH370 before turning the plane around and heading south: 'Good night. Good night. Malaysian three-seven-zero.'
The Boeing 777 crashed because it ran out of fuel, but Mr Thomas believes the passengers and crew would long have been dead.
'Hopefully (Zaharie) put them all to sleep by depressurising the plane, to disable everybody, to prevent people from breaking into cockpit,' he said.
'The co-pilot could easily have been gotten rid of – “get me a glass of water” – and as soon as he’s out of cockpit you put the “deny entry" on lock. He then would have donned his own oxygen supply.'
In the immediate wake of the disaster, Captain Zaharie's family and friends angrily refuted that the pilot had been distracted, withdrawn and possibly suicidal before the doomed flight.
The pilot's daughter Aishah Zaharie, then a Deakin University architecture student in Geelong, wrote on Facebook in the weeks afterward about a Daily Mail report of the pilot's mental state 'You can bet your ass I will not forgive you'.
Zaharie's wife, Faizah Khanum Mustafa Khan, denied she had said her husband 'retreated into a shell', spending time alone in the room with the flight simulator he had built himself.
However, It has since emerged that Zaharie was probably clinically depressed, that his wife had moved out of the house where he had the flight simulator and into their second house.
'Family hit out, they always do,' Mr Thomas said. 'But it is important to recover the plane and solve the mystery ... it's closure for the relatives [of the passengers and other crew].'
A young Captain Zaharie (above) became a senior Malaysia Airlines pilot but a year before the crash began anti-government rants on Facebook which should have set off alarm bells
The daughter of the MH370 pilot Aishah Zaharie was studying architecture in Melbourne at the time of the disaster and now works as an architect in Malaysia, for firm Akiprima
Aishah Zaharie has since been quoted as saying she her father had changed and during her final conversation with him 'she barely recognised him'.
An unconfirmed News Corp report claimed Ms Zaharie added: 'He wasn’t the father I knew. He seemed disturbed and lost in a world of his own'.
Ms Zaharie now works as an architect for the firm Akiprima in Selangor, Malaysia, after having worked for Port Philip Building Services in Melbourne and ZH&S architects in Kuala Lumpur, according to her linkedin.com profile.
Neither Ms Zaharie, nor her mother Faizah Khanum Mustafa Khan, nor the pilot's sister Sakinab Shah responded to Daily Mail Australia's inquiries about MH370 and Captain Zaharie.
According to a report by The Atlantic aviation expert William Langewiesche, Captain Zaharie's chaotic personal life and fragile emotional state likely caused him to crash the plane.
A 777 pilot and lifelong friend of Zaharie told Langewiesche he had come to that conclusion reluctantly.
'Zaharie's marriage was bad. In the past he slept with some of the flight attendants. And so what? We all do,' he said.
'You're flying all over the world with these beautiful girls in the back. But his wife knew.'
He admitted Zaharie's emotional state 'may have been a factor.'
Zaharie became obsessed with Qi Min Lan, one of two model sisters, sending 97 Facebook posts including invitations to visit and sexualised messages
Zaharie's message to Qi Min Lan after she posted a photo of herself in the satin robe was 'just shower?'
As well as sending Facebook messages to the twin models, Qi Min Lan and her twin Lan Qi Hui, then 26, begging them to come to Kuala Lumpur where he lived with his wife, Zaharie bombarded them with creepy comments.
When Qi Min Lan posted a photo of herself in a bathrobe, he wrote, 'Just shower?'
Zaharie also revealed publicly on his own Facebook page his disgust with the ruling regime, branding then-Prime Minister Najib Razak a 'moron' and posting 119 times before the 2013 election.
'The posts and messages in Malay were recorded,' Mr Thomas said. The pilot directed 97 separate Facebook comments at Qi Min Lan, his 'favourite' of the sisters.
Ms Min said later that she did not know Zaharie at all, and that he had been 'just a social network’s fan of mine'.
'I have many followers in my social network - he is just one of them. Anyhow the pilot no disturb my life because I no reply to him at all.'
Captain Zaharie and his wife Faizah (above) had grown apart in the years leading up to the crash and a fellow pilot said his emotional state 'may have a been a factor' in the crash
Immediately after the crash it was Australia, working on Malaysia’s behalf, which coordinated what became the largest and most expensive search in aviation history.
From October 2014 to January 2017, a comprehensive survey was made of 120,000 km of sea floor about 1800km southwest of Western Australia.
During those years an extraordinary debris trail across the Indian Ocean left parts washing up on islands such as Reunion and Madagascar and on the coast of eastern Africa.
But the main body of the aircraft has never been recovered.
Richard Godfrey said the amount of debris showed that the crash was 'anything but a soft landing on the ocean'.
'The level of damage with fractures on all sides and the extreme force of the penetration right through the debris items leads to the conclusion that the end of the flight was in a high-speed dive,' he said.
On 22 January 2018, a search by private US marine exploration company Ocean Infinity began.
Ocean Infinity used the ship Sea Bed Constructor (above) to search for MH 370 in 2018 and the private US marine exploration company will now recommence the hunt for the plane
This last search for MH370 was approved by the Malaysian government, provided payment of up to $70m would be made only if the wreckage is found.
The search ended unsuccessfully in June that year, and in March 2019 the Malaysian Government said it was only willing to look at any ‘credible leads or specific proposals’ regarding any further searches.
'Ocean Infinity stated it was ready to resume the search on the same no-fee no-find basis based on Richard Godfrey’s research, but the Malaysian Government has shown no interest, citing the "no new credible leads" reason,' Mr Thomas said.
The Malaysian Government has now said it would be willing to recommence a search using Ocean Infinity.
Aishah Zaharie (above in Sydney) lived and studied in Australia but now works as an architect in Malaysia with her family not publicly commenting about MH370
On Monday, the company's CEO, Oliver Plunkett said it hoped to 'get back to the search soon' now the government had invited the firm to discuss resuming the search called off six years ago.
Mr Thomas said despite Malaysia previously saying there had been no new credible leads, Mr Godfrey's flight path and ocean drift analysis showed investigators had explored the wrong area of seabed.
He believed it was time for the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) to take over the crash investigation and retrieve the plane from the bottom of the ocean.
Richard Godfrey's report states that MH370 impacted the ocean west of Perth at 33.177°S 95.300°E and lies at a depth of 4,000m in a very mountainous area with deep ravines and a volcano.
He said the crash location area, found using the WSPR technology and drift analysis by the University of Western Australia, had not been previously searched.
'MH370 is an extraordinary event almost unprecedented in modern history,' Mr Thomas said.
'But it has been made more of a mystery because of the reluctance of Malaysia, which seems to find every reason not to go look for it.
‘After Air France Flight 447 crashed into the Atlantic in June 2009, they didn’t discover it for three years and the black boxes were both readable and they were able to extract all the data.
‘After 10 years, who knows?’