Loading Page...

What was in the cargo of MH370?

MH370 had in its cargo hold 5 tons of mangosteens — a sweet tropical fruit about as big as a tangerine — along with 221kg of lithium-ion batteries. The items were being carried from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, another source of revenue for the flight along with the 239 people it was carrying.



People Also Ask

Since the crash of MH370 in the Indian Ocean a considerable amount of physical evidence has been gathered. 36 pieces of floating debris have been found and delivered to the Malaysian authorities for investigation.

MORE DETAILS

The piece of debris was found by the fisherman named Tataly in 2017, after it washed up on the Madagascar shore in 2017 in the wake of tropical storm Fernando. He kept the landing gear door at his home for five years and wasn't aware of its significance. The fisherman's wife was using the door as a washing board.

MORE DETAILS

The Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 that vanished in 2014 remains missing. THE FACTS: Social media users are sharing photos of an old, abandoned plane at the bottom of the sea, falsely claiming it shows the wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which has been missing since it went down in 2014 with 239 people aboard.

MORE DETAILS

Possible causes of the aircraft's disappearance That the signals had likely been switched off from inside the aircraft suggested suicide by one of the crew, but nothing obviously suspicious was found in the behaviour of the captain, the first officer, or the cabin crew immediately prior to the flight.

MORE DETAILS

How much did the search cost? In 2014, Australia committed $90 million to the search for MH370, including $60 million to support the underwater search activities. The People's Republic of China committed $20 million in the form of funding and equipment.

MORE DETAILS

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) led the underwater search for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 in the southern Indian Ocean, including analysis of the search area, the sea floor mapping and sea floor search.

MORE DETAILS

Friends of Zaharie Ahmad Shah, who was the captain of MH370, told The Atlantic that the 53-year-old pilot was depressed and lonely, engaged in one-sided flirting with young women on Facebook, and spent much of his non-flying time pacing empty rooms inside his home.

MORE DETAILS

Despite limited findings, including 41 confirmed debris items, the larger aircraft and its passengers remain missing, leaving much of the MH370 mystery still unresolved.

MORE DETAILS

MH370: Here's what's been found from jetliner 3 years after it disappeared
  • Plane wing fragment. Where found: Mauritius. ...
  • Flaperon : Where found: Reunion Island. ...
  • Cabin interior panel. Where found: Madagascar. ...
  • Engine cowling. Where found: Mossel Bay, South Africa. ...
  • Main cabin interior panel. ...
  • Horizontal stabilizer. ...
  • Flap track fairing.


MORE DETAILS

In 2014 all the families of passengers and crew on board MH370 were offered interim payments of US$50,000, non-conditional and regardless of any legal action, which some accepted.

MORE DETAILS

In November 2022 a Dutch court found Girkin and two others guilty of murder; the court also ruled that the missile that destroyed the plane had come from Russia and that it had been fired by Russian-led troops in Russian-controlled territory.

MORE DETAILS

The underwater search had cost $200m, including $60m from the Australian government, and Malaysia had contributed “more than anyone else”. “It has been a costly exercise but it hasn't been a factor in the decision to suspend the search,” he said.

MORE DETAILS

In the 1940s and '50s, when communication technology was still in its primitive stages, such disappearances were more common. But there's only one flight in recent history that disappeared without a trace for as long as Malaysia 370 has.

MORE DETAILS