Malaysian police are investigating a flight engineer who was among the passengers on the missing Malaysia Airlines 777 as they focus on the pilots and anyone else on board who had technical flying knowledge, a senior police official said.
The aviation engineer is Mohd Khairul Amri Selamat, 29, a Malaysian who has said on social media he had worked for a private jet charter company.
"Yes, we are looking into Mohd Khairul as well as the other passengers and crew. The focus is on anyone else who might have had aviation skills on that plane," a senior police official with knowledge of the investigations told Reuters news agency.
Malaysian investigators are trawling through the backgrounds of the pilots, crew and ground staff who worked on the missing plane for clues as to why someone on board flew it hundreds, or perhaps thousands, of miles off course.
No trace of the plane has been found more than a week after it vanished but investigators believe it was diverted by someone with deep knowledge of the plane and of commercial navigation.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak on Saturday said evidence pointed to a deliberate diversion of the flight, given the controlled way it was apparently turned around and flown far to the west of its original route to Beijing.
As an engineer specialising in executive jets, Khairul would not necessarily have all the knowledge needed to divert and fly a large airliner.
Khairul had said he worked for Swiss-based jet charter firm Execujet Aviation, but the company declined to say whether it still employed him. In a picture posted on Khairul's Facebook account in 2011, he identified himself as an employee of Execujet's Malaysian operations.
"We can't disclose anything. We want to protect the family's privacy," an official at the company's Malaysian office said.
Khairul, a father of one daughter, had recently bought a house on the outskirts of the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, and had more than 10 years experience as a flight engineer, his father Selamat Omar said. He declined to say whether he believed his son could have been involved in any foul play.
Selamat said he and other family members were supposed to visit Khairul's new house this month, but Khairul had told his father he had to go for a job in Beijing and that they would reschedule. That was the last time they spoke.
"Khairul was doing well in his job and was a good son. He would come visit us at least once a month," Selamat said.
0 comments:
Post a Comment