Cape Times

‘Sleeping supervisor’ to be probed

- Eileen NG Sapa-AP

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s transport minister yesterday vowed to take stern action against an air traffic control supervisor if it was confirmed that he was asleep on the job when Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeare­d a year ago.

An interim investigat­ion report on Sunday contained transcript­s of conversati­ons between air traffic controller­s in the region and the airline that revealed confusion in the hours after the Boeing 777 dropped off radar with 239 people aboard while flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

In one conversati­on four hours after the plane disappeare­d, a Kuala Lumpur air traffic controller told a Malaysia Airlines official that he would need to wake up his supervisor when pressed on the exact time of the last contact with the plane.

The controller came on duty after the plane vanished.

Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said his department viewed the matter seriously and was conducting an internal probe.

“The work is on rotation… If he is on a working shift, this is serious.

“We will definitely take action if there is any misconduct,” he told reporters.

Liow said the ministry didn’t investigat­e the matter earlier as they were waiting for Sunday’s report by the independen­t safety investigat­ion team.

The ministry’s probe will be “very fast,” he added, without saying when it would be completed.

Despite an exhaustive search in the southern Indian Ocean where the plane was believed to have crashed, based on analyses of transmissi­ons between the aircraft and a satellite, no trace of wreckage has been found.

In late January, Malaysia’s government formally declared the plane’s disappeara­nce an accident and said all on board were presumed dead.

The report on Sunday also showed that the battery of the underwater locator beacon for the plane’s data recorder had expired more than a year before the jet vanished on March 8, 2014, because of a computer data error that went unnoticed by maintenanc­e crews.

Liow said a tripartite meeting involving ministers from Australia, Malaysia and China – where most of the passengers are from – would take place in Kuala Lumpur next month to discuss the next step.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has said the hunt for the plane would continue even if searchers scouring a 60 000km² swath of the seabed off Australia’s west coast do not find it by May.

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