Investigators probing the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 suspect that the co-pilot of the jetliner tried to make a call
with his cellphone after the plane was diverted from its scheduled route, Malaysia's New Straits Times reported sources as saying on Saturday.
The newspaper cited unidentified
investigative sources as saying the attempted call from co-pilot Fariq
Abdul Hamid's phone was picked up by a cellphone tower as the plane was
about 200 nautical miles northwest of the west coast state of Penang.
That was around where military radar made its last sighting of the
missing jet at 2:15 a.m. local time on March 8.
"The telco's (telecommunications company's) tower established the call
that he was trying to make. On why the call was cut off, it was likely
because the aircraft was fast moving away from the tower and had not
come under the coverage of the next one," the New Straits Times cited a
source as saying.
Government
officials could not immediately be reached for comment on the report.
The New Straits Times quoted acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin
Hussein as saying that the report needed to be verified.
But he appeared to cast doubt on the report by saying: "If this did happen, we would have known about it earlier."
The New Straits Times cited separate investigative sources as saying
that a signal had been picked up from Fariq's cellphone, but that it
could have resulted from the device being switched on rather than being
used to make a call.
Malaysia
is focusing its criminal investigation on the cabin crew and the pilots
of the plane -- 53-year-old captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah and 27-year old
Fariq -- after clearing all 227 passengers of any involvement, police
have said.
Investigators
believe that someone with detailed knowledge of both the Boeing
777-200ER and commercial aviation navigation switched off the plane's
communications systems before diverting it thousands of miles off its
scheduled course.
The search
for the missing jetliner in the southern Indian ocean resumed on
Saturday, amid fears that batteries powering signals from the black box
recorder on board may have died.
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