A technology expert confirmed that the MH370 plane may be lying in a jungle in the high mountains in Cambodia, Daily Star reported on September 2.
Sharing with the Daily Star, technology expert Ian Wilson revealed that he discovered the suspected plane wreck of MH370 through the online map application Google Map .
Mr. Wilson asserted that the figures of this wreck are equivalent to the MH370 plane that mysteriously disappeared on March 8, 2014 while carrying 239 people, including 12 crew members, from Kuala Lumpur to Kuala Lumpur. Beijing.
According to technology expert Ian Wilson, the plane wreck he discovered in Cambodia is about 70m long. (Photo: Daily Star).
Specifically, according to technology expert Wilson, the plane wreck he discovered in Cambodia is about 70m long, slightly more than the length of MH370 which is 63.7m. However, the plane wreck discovered in Cambodia has a mysterious gap between the tail and fuselage. Mr. Wilson thinks the plane may have broken after hitting the ground and this is the cause of the difference in length.
According to the Daily Star, Mr. Wilson’s discovery could be a breakthrough in the journey to find answers to the mysterious disappearance of MH370 four years ago. Mr. Wilson confirmed he will go to the Cambodian jungle mentioned above in the hope of solving the greatest aviation mystery of all time.
Earlier, on July 30, the Malaysian government released the final investigation report on MH370. In this 449-page report, investigators insist they do not rule out the possibility that MH370 “was interfered with by a third party to change course”. However, investigators stressed that the lack of evidence, including flight recorders, made it impossible for them to clarify why MH370 changed course and why contact with MH370 was lost 40 minutes after takeoff. wing.
After the Malaysian government published the above report, the French Air Transport Supervision Agency (Gendarmerie of Air Transport (GTA)) opened its own investigation to find answers to the MH370 case. GTA insists the Malaysian government’s report is “inaccurate and questionable” amid suspicions of a cover-up.