Gulf News

‘No clues’ from FBI report on MH370 pilot

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Australia yesterday brushed off a reported FBI probe into the pilot of missing flight MH370, saying it was a matter for Malaysia and did not shed light on the plane’s location.

The New York magazine Friday cited a secret FBI document showing the jet’s captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah used his elaborate home-built flight simulator to chart a route similar to the one believed taken by the doomed plane just weeks before it disappeare­d.

The revelation reignited speculatio­n in the Australian media yesterday that the unsolved mystery could have been a murder/suicide.

“I’m aware, as is the government, of the reports about the FBI investigat­ion into the MH370 captain’s home simulator,” Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said in Sydney.

“I’m unable to comment on them other than to say that it’s a matter for the Malaysian investigat­ors when they’re considerin­g their final report into this tragedy.”

But he added: “I just note that even if the simulator informatio­n does show that it is possible or very likely that the captain planned this shocking event, it does not tell us the location of the aircraft.”

Australia has been leading the massive search for the Malaysia Airlines plane, which is believed to have gone down in the southern Indian Ocean after vanishing on March 8, 2014 en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people aboard.

Search authoritie­s say satellite data indicated the plane went down somewhere in that remote and stormy ocean far off Western Australia with the Malaysian government maintainin­g it does not know what caused the tragedy.

According to a confidenti­al document from Malaysian police investigat­ing the incident obtained by the New York magazine, the FBI recovered deleted data points from the flight simulator on Zaharie’s hard drive.

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