BEIJING – The last radio
transmission from the cockpit of missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370 was
“Alright, good night”, Kuala Lumpur’s ambassador to Beijing reportedly said
Wednesday during a meeting with Chinese relatives.
Iskandar Sarudin was speaking to
passengers’ relatives and friends at a Beijing hotel. A total of 153 of the 239
people on board the aircraft are Chinese.
The flight from Kuala Lumpur to
Beijing disappeared from radar screens early on Saturday without making a
distress call and no confirmed wreckage has been found, despite a vast search.
The “alright, good night” comment
from one of the pilots came as the flight switched from Malaysian to Vietnamese
airspace, Singapore’s Straits Times newspaper quoted the ambassador as saying.
As confusion deepens over the search
area and whether Malaysian military radar tracked the aircraft, he said “now is
not the time” to reveal what information the military had supplied civilian
authorities.
Relatives told AFP the event had
been “orderly”, in contrast to a meeting with Chinese officials on Monday, when
reports said family members hurled abuse at government representatives.
Some attacked Beijing’s own response
as the crisis entered its fifth day.
“I think the Chinese government
needs to be more active with this,” said a man surnamed Zhang, whose daughter
was on board, coming back from a business trip.
“After all, this is happening to
Chinese people,” he added.
Comments on China’s hugely popular
weibo microblogs were also critical.
Chinese authorities have emphasised
through state-run media that they are waging an “all-out effort” to locate the
missing aircraft.
- Disgust -
Seven Chinese ships are taking part
in the search, with an eighth due to arrive Wednesday, according to the
official Xinhua news agency.
But web users lashed out at a Xinhua
picture showing the chief of China’s maritime search and rescue centre sitting
at a desk and speaking on the telephone.
“What decade is it, that they’re
still taking these kinds of photos?! Is it to prove that the leaders are keeping
busy?” asked one user.
“I have no other feeling but
disgust,” wrote another.
Others expressed frustration with
the search effort.
“It’s been nearly 96 hours since
MH370 lost contact, and 10 countries have joined the search-and-rescue effort,
but they still haven’t found any traces of the lost aircraft,” wrote one.
“The search continues, but if they
ultimately don’t find any clues, what on earth do we call this incident?”
At the hotel, relatives said they
were now ready to accept funds which the airline had earlier described as
“comfort” money, provided during “difficult times”.
They had earlier asked for the terms
to be reviewed, but one said: “I don’t think this is an issue any more for most
of us.”
A copy of the acceptance form seen
by AFP says: “The airline offers the money out of kindness and it will not
offset any final compensation.”
Some of the family members have
travelled to Malaysia to be closer to the search effort, but most have not.
“I am not sleeping or eating well,”
said one. “I am not thinking of going to Malaysia. What can I do there? I would
rather stay in my own country.”
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