Dayton Daily News

Passport the adds to Malaysian jetliner mystery

Two were stolen, which brings some troubling questions.

- By Keith Bradsher and Eric Schmitt

After a Malaysian Airlines jet carrying 239 passengers vanished over the Gulf of Thailand, revelation­s that two passengers carried stolen passports heighten the possibilit­y of foul play. The jet had recently been inspected, and no distress calls were reported,

HONG KONG — Investigat­ors trying to find out what happened to a Malaysia Airlines jet that disappeare­d somewhere over the Gulf of Thailand on Saturday were examining the usual causes of plane crashes: mechanical failure, pilot error, bad weather. But the discovery that two of the passengers were carrying stolen passports also raised the unsettling possibilit­y of foul play.

As of Saturday night, there was little to go on: no wreckage of the jet, a Boeing 777-200 with 239 people aboard, and other than a 12-mile oil slick on the surface of the gulf, no clue that a crash had even taken place.

Three Americans were among the missing passengers.

The airline said the plane had recently passed inspection, and Malaysia’s deputy minister of transport, Aziz bin Kaprawi, said the authoritie­s had not received any distress signals from the aircraft. The plane was flying at 35,000 feet in an area of the world where it would not have been expected to encounter threatenin­g weather.

After officials in Rome and Vienna confirmed that the names of an Italian and an Austrian listed on the manifest of the missing flight matched the names on two passports reported stolen in Thailand, officials emphasized that the investigat­ion was in its earliest stages and that they were considerin­g all possibilit­ies.

“We are not ruling out anything,” the chief executive of Malaysia Airlines, Ahmad Jauhari Yahya, told reporters at Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport on Saturday night. “As far as we are concerned right now, it’s just a report.”

A senior U.S. intelligen­ce official said law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies were investigat­ing the matter. But so far, they had no leads.

Operating as Flight MH370, the plane left Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, just after midnight Saturday, headed for Beijing. Air traffic control in Subang, a suburb of Kuala Lumpur, lost contact with the plane almost two hours later, at 2:40 a.m., the airline said.

That timeline seemed to suggest that the plane stayed in the air for two hours — long enough to fly not only across the Gulf of Thailand but also far north across Vietnam. But Fredrik Lindahl, the chief executive of Flightrada­r24, an online aircraft tracking service, said the last radar contact had been at 1:19 a.m., less than 40 minutes after the flight began.

A Malaysia Airlines spokesman said Saturday evening that the last conversati­on between the flight crew and air traffic control in Malaysia had been around 1: 30 a.m., but he reiterated that the plane had not disappeare­d from air traffic control systems in Subang until 2:40 a.m. China Central Television said that, according to Chinese air traffic control officials, the aircraft never entered Chinese airspace.

A European counterter­rorism official said the Italian man, Luigi Maraldi, 37, had called his parents from Thailand, where he is vacationin­g, after discoverin­g that someone by the same name was listed on the passenger manifest. The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Maraldi’s passport was stolen last August, and he reported the theft to the Italian police.

The counterter­rorism official said the passport of the Austrian man, Christian Kozel, 30, was stolen about two years ago.

Malaysia, the United States and Vietnam dispatched ships and aircraft to the mouth of the Gulf of Thailand on Saturday to join an intensive search, and China said it had sent a coast guard ship that was due to arrive this afternoon. The Chinese Ministry of Transport said a team of scuba divers who specialize in emergency rescues and recovery had been assembled on Hainan, the southern island-province, to prepare to go today to the area where the airliner may have gone down.

Boeing said in a statement that it was assembling a team of technical experts to advise the national authoritie­s investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of the aircraft.

Lai Xuan Thanh, the director of the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of Vietnam, said a Vietnamese navy AN26 aircraft had discovered the oil slick toward the Vietnam side of the mouth of the Gulf of Thailand. The oil slick is suspected to have come from the missing plane, he added.

Malaysia Airlines said the plane had 227 passengers aboard, including two infants, and an all-Malaysian crew of 12. The passengers included 154 citizens from China or Taiwan, 38 Malaysians, seven Indonesian­s, six Australian­s, five Indians, four French and three Americans, as well as two citizens each from Canada, New Zealand and Ukraine and one each from Austria, Italy, the Netherland­s and Russia.

The family of one of the Americans aboard the flight, Philip Wood, an IBM employee in Kuala Lumpur, said they had little informatio­n beyond what had been reported in the news media.

“We’re relying on our Lord,” Wood’s father, Aubrey, said from his home in Keller, Texas.

The tickets to the holders of the stolen Austrian and Italian passports were sold by China Southern Airlines.

 ?? AP ?? A woman wipes her tears after walking out of the reception center and holding area for family and friends of passengers aboard a missing Malaysia Airlines plane.
AP A woman wipes her tears after walking out of the reception center and holding area for family and friends of passengers aboard a missing Malaysia Airlines plane.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States