TRAGECTORY OF MISSING PLANE BEFORE IT DISAPPEARED FROM RADAR
Malaysia drew a fresh round of
scathing criticism from China today over conflicting information on missing
flight MH370, with state media and social media users voicing increasing
scepticism as the search enters its 10th day.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib
Razak on Saturday announced that the Malaysia Airlines flight's disappearance
may have been "deliberate" and that the aeroplane flew for several
hours after leaving its intended flight path.
In an editorial, the China Daily
newspaper questioned why the announcement from Kuala Lumpur came more than a
week after the flight vanished and wondered whether Malaysia was sharing all of
the information it had gathered.
"The contradictory and
piecemeal information Malaysia Airlines and its government have provided has
made search efforts difficult and the entire incident even more
mysterious," it said.
"What else is known that has
not been shared with the world?"
Two-thirds of the passengers on
board the flight were Chinese, and Beijing has been critical of Malaysia's
sharing of information – a concern reiterated today as fears mounted that the
plane might have been hijacked.
"It is of the utmost importance
that any loopholes that might have been exploited by hijackers or terrorists be
identified as soon as possible because we need counter-measures to plug
them," the China Daily said.
Yao Shujie, the head of the School
of Contemporary Chinese Studies at the University of Nottingham, wrote in an
op-ed in China's state-run Global Times newspaper that Malaysia "has lost
authority and credibility" because of its chaotic response.
"The lack of national strength
and experience in dealing with incidents has left the Malaysian government
helpless and exhausted by denying all kinds of rumours," Yao said.
He added: "If the search
continues to be fruitless even following the new information, Malaysia would be
better off handing over its command in the international rescue
operation."
The plane's disappearance remained
the most hotly debated topic on China's popular social networks, with many
users of Sina Weibo, a Chinese equivalent of Twitter, echoing concerns over the
Malaysian government's release of information.
"Why is it only now that
they've confirmed it may have been hijacked?" one Sina Weibo user wrote
this morning in response to the latest revelations by Kuala Lumpur.
"Malaysia, what else are you
hiding?"
Another posted: "I'm really
getting more and more disappointed in Malaysia and their unreliable government.
I'm not planning on travelling there any time in the future."
Last week, one of the most widely
forwarded messages was a posting that read: "Vietnam keeps discovering.
Malaysia Airlines keeps denying. China keeps sending rescue teams."
Today, the meme had taken a new
twist.
"Malaysia has been telling a
week's worth of lies. Vietnam has fished out a week's worth of rubbish. China
has forwarded a week's worth of news," read the latest viral message. –
AFP
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