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Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Corruption is Everywhere > Thousands arrested, 174 killed in Bangladesh chaos; Another $85 mn recovered from Malaysia's phenomenol 1MDB fraud

 

Thousands of protesters arrested in Bangladesh

amid deadly unrest


More than 2,500 people have been arrested in Bangladesh amid ongoing violence triggered by protests over employment quotas, according to an AFP tally on Tuesday. At least 174 people, including several police officers, have died in the unrest, which led to a curfew, military deployment and a nationwide internet blackout.

Issued on: 

The number of arrests in days of violence in Bangladesh passed the 2,500 mark in an AFP tally on Tuesday, after protests over employment quotas sparked widespread unrest.



At least 174 people have died, including several police officers, according to a separate AFP count of victims reported by police and hospitals.

What began as demonstrations against politicised admission quotas for sought-after government jobs snowballed last week into some of the worst unrest of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's tenure.

A curfew was imposed and soldiers deployed across the South Asian country, and a nationwide internet blackout drastically restricted the flow of information, upending daily life for many.


On Sunday, the Supreme Court pared back the number of reserved jobs for specific groups, including the descendants of "freedom fighters" from Bangladesh's 1971 liberation war against Pakistan.

The student group leading the demonstrations suspended its protests Monday for 48 hours, with its leader saying they had not wanted reform "at the expense of so much blood".

The restrictions remained in place Tuesday after the army chief said the situation had been brought "under control".

There was a heavy military presence in Dhaka, with bunkers set up at some intersections and key roads blocked with barbed wire.

But more people were on the streets, as were hundreds of rickshaws.

"I did not drive rickshaws the first few days of curfew, But today I didn't have any choice," rickshaw driver Hanif told AFP. 

"If I don't do it, my family will go hungry."

The head of Students Against Discrimination, the main group organising the protests, told AFP in his hospital room Monday that he feared for his life after being abducted and beaten, and the group said Tuesday at least four of its leaders were missing, asking authorities to "return" them by the evening.

'Killed at random'

The authorities' response to the protests has been widely criticised, with Bangladeshi Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus urging "world leaders and the United Nations to do everything within their powers to end the violence" in a statement.

The respected 83-year-old economist is credited with lifting millions out of poverty with his pioneering microfinance bank but earned the enmity of Hasina, who has accused him of "sucking blood" from the poor.

"Young people are being killed at random every day," Yunus told AFP. "Hospitals do not reveal the number of wounded and dead.

Diplomats in Dhaka also questioned the government's actions, with US Ambassador Peter Haas telling the foreign minister he had shown a one-sided video at a briefing to diplomats.

Government officials have repeatedly blamed the protesters and opposition for the unrest.

More than 1,200 people detained over the course of the violence – nearly half the 2,580 total – were held in Dhaka and its rural and industrial areas, according to police officials who spoke to AFP.

Almost 600 were arrested in Chittagong and its rural areas, with hundreds more detentions tallied in multiple districts across the country.

'Sheikh Hasina never flees

With around 18 million young people in Bangladesh out of work, according to government figures, the June reintroduction of the quota scheme – halted since 2018 – deeply upset graduates facing an acute jobs crisis.

With protests mounting across the country, the Supreme Court on Sunday curtailed the number of reserved jobs from 56 percent of all positions to seven percent, mostly for the children and grandchildren of "freedom fighters" from the 1971 war.

While 93 percent of jobs will be awarded on merit, the decision fell short of protesters' demands to scrap the "freedom fighter" category altogether.

Late Monday, Hasina's spokesman told AFP the prime minister had approved a government order putting the Supreme Court's judgement into effect. 

Critics say the quota is used to stack public jobs with loyalists to Hasina's ruling Awami League.

Hasina, 76, has ruled the country since 2009 and won her fourth consecutive election in January after a vote without genuine opposition.

Her government is also accused by rights groups of misusing state institutions to entrench its hold on power and stamp out dissent, including by the extrajudicial killing of opposition activists.

(AFP)



U.S. recovers cash, artwork in $85M

1MDB civil forfeiture

By Mike Heuer

The superyacht Equanimity arrives at Port Klang, Selangor, Malaysia, on Aug. 7, 2018, and is among many assets seized from suspected 1MDB embezzler Low Taek Jho in recent years. Photo by Ahmad Yusni/EPA-EFE
The superyacht Equanimity arrives at Port Klang, Selangor, Malaysia, on Aug. 7, 2018, and is among many assets seized from suspected 1MDB embezzler Low Taek Jho in recent years. Photo by Ahmad Yusni/EPA-EFE

July 23 (UPI) -- The Department of Justice recovered nearly $85 million in cash and artwork allegedly paid for with money embezzled from 1Malaysia Development Berhad.

Federal prosecutors also recovered diamond jewelry and artwork by Pablo PicassoClaude MonetVincent Van Gogh, Diane Arbus and Jean-Michel Basquiat, it announced Tuesday.

The works of art and jewelry were allegedly possessed by Low Taek Jho, who also goes by Jho Low, and his co-conspirators after embezzling billions from 1MDB, which is Malaysia's sovereign investment fund.

Low and his co-conspirators are accused of embezzling more than $4.5 billion from 1MDB from 2009 through 2015.

1MDB former general counsel "Jasmine" Loo Ai Swan agreed to help the Department of Justice recover artwork by Picasso and money from a Swiss bank account.

The Department of Justice also obtained civil forfeiture orders on assets allegedly obtained by Low using embezzled funds, including the aforementioned diamond jewelry and works of art.

Instead of using 1MDB funds for their intended purpose of promoting economic development in Malaysia through direct foreign investment and global partnerships, the Department of Justice says Low and Loo conspired to embezzle the money.

Instead of improving the well-being of Malaysian people, the Department of Justice alleged the pair and others conspired to engage in international bribery and money laundering to promote their own well-being at the expense of the Malaysian people.

Loo agreed to surrender a Picasso work of art and $1.8 million in cash. The agreement still leaves Loo liable for potential criminal charges.

Low also agreed to forfeit the many works of art he allegedly bought using embezzled funds from 1MDB.

In June, he agreed to a $100 million asset forfeiture.

The combined assets forfeited by Loo and Low amount to about $85 million.

The asset forfeiture was done through the U.S. District Court for Central California.

The Department of Justice previously secured a combined total of about $1.4 billion in assets and returned them to Malaysia.

The assets were associated with the international embezzlement, money laundering and bribery scheme in which Loo, Low and others allegedly participated.

Low also is charged with conspiracy to launder billions embezzled from 1MDB and violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act by allegedly bribing Malaysian and Emirati officials.

Now the question is, how much and to whom? And were the recipient(s) aware of it? Of course they were, or what would be the point?

The additional criminal charges against Low are filed in the U.S. District Court of Eastern New York.


Thursday, June 27, 2024

Corruption is Everywhere > $100mn Recovered from Malaysia's phenomenal 1MDB slush fund

 

DOJ recovers $100 million civil forfeiture in Malaysia's 1MDB scheme

The Department of Justice said Wednesday it reached an agreement with Low Taek Jho for the largest-ever $100 civil forfeiture in a multi-billion dollar 1MDB Malaysia embezzlement and money laundering scheme. Prime Minister of Malaysia Mohammed Najib Razak (pictured, 2013) went to prison for his part in the scheme in August 2022. Low still faces criminal charges in New York. File Photo by Ismael Mohamad/UPI
The Department of Justice said Wednesday it reached an agreement with Low Taek Jho for the largest-ever $100 (mn) civil forfeiture in a multi-billion dollar 1MDB Malaysia embezzlement and money laundering scheme. Prime Minister of Malaysia Mohammed Najib Razak (pictured, 2013) went to prison for his part in the scheme in August 2022. Low still faces criminal charges in New York. File Photo by Ismael Mohamad/UPI | License Photo

June 26 (UPI) -- The Department of Justice said Wednesday an agreement was reached in the alleged embezzlement of $4.5 billion from Malaysia's sovereign investment fund known as 1 Malaysia Development Berhad, or 1MDB.

The agreement is with Low Taek Jho, also known as Jho Low, members of his family and trust entities Low established. It includes a civil forfeiture of more than $100 million.

The DOJ said that, prior to this agreement, more than $1.4 billion in assets associated with the scheme was returned to Malaysia.

"The Low Parties have also agreed to cooperate in the transfer to Malaysia of certain other assets located in Hong Kong, Switzerland, and Singapore that are linked to 1MDB funds," the DOJ said in a statement. "Under the agreement, the department will coordinate with foreign partners to facilitate the liquidation and return of these assets to Malaysia."

The DOJ, citing the civil forfeiture complaints, said, "From 2009 through 2015, more than $4.5 billion in funds belonging to 1MDB were allegedly misappropriated by high-level officials of 1MDB and their associates, including Low, through a criminal conspiracy involving international money laundering and bribery."

Civil forfeiture actions under the agreement include a Paris luxury apartment, as well as art in Switzerland by Andy Warhol and Claude Monet, which Low bought for roughly $35 million.

Approximately $67 million in real property and bank accounts cash in Hong Kong, Switzerland and Singapore is also being forfeited.

In addition to the civil forfeiture, DOJ said Low faces criminal charges for "allegedly conspiring to launder billions of dollars embezzled from 1MDB and for conspiring to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act by allegedly paying bribes to various Malaysian and Emirati officials, and in the District of Columbia for allegedly conspiring to make and conceal foreign and conduit campaign contributions during the United States presidential election in 2012."

So, to which Presidential candidate did these concealed contributions go? Hmmmm?

Ex-Malaysia Prime Minister Najib Razak went to prison in August 2022 after a top court affirmed his sentence for stealing billions from the 1MDB fund. He set up the fund after taking office in 2009.

Goldman Sachs and its Malaysian subsidiary agreed to pay $2.9 billion in October 2020 after admitting to bribery as part of the 1MDB scandal.

In April 2023, U.S. hip-hop group the Fugees founding member Pras Michel was convicted of being involved in a multi-million-dollar conspiracy aimed at influencing the White House under two administrations and for working as an agent for China that was allegedly part of the huge scheme run by Low.

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Bits and Bites from Around the World > Man tells 4 y/o to shoot cops; Info points to murder-suicide by pilot of MH370

..
Four-year-old told to fire gun at officers – police


The child’s parent had allegedly been angered over an incorrect order

at a McDonald’s drive-through in the US state of Utah 


FILE PHOTO © Getty Images / anadorado


A father told his four-year-old child to fire a gun at officers following a dispute over a McDonald’s order, police in Utah have said. The gun was seized from the child just as it was fired. 

The incident happened on Monday lunchtime at a drive-through restaurant in Midvale, in suburban Salt Lake City. The unidentified 21-year-old man had begun arguing with staff, demanding his order be corrected while brandishing a gun in their direction, Unified Police spokeswoman Sergeant Melody Cutler told the media. 

Staff corrected his order, asked him to move into a waiting area, and called the police. The disgruntled customer apparently failed to cooperate with the attending officers and had to be pulled from his vehicle. The agents then spotted the child holding the gun, which was pointed towards them. An officer managed to push the gun to one side as it was fired, receiving a minor injury to his arm as he did so.

According to Sgt Cutler, the officer in question shouted “Kid!”, alerting his colleagues not to fire back at the four-year-old. A witness informed the police that they had heard the father tell the child, who was in the backseat with a three-year-old sibling, to shoot at the cops, Cutler said.

The father remains in custody and Unified Police say the incident is currently an “active investigation.”

The idiot should never be allowed near his children again. As I see it, it was attempted murder by proxy, of a cop, or more than one. 




Pilot's baffling 22 minute manoeuvre which could hold the key

to proving MH370 mystery WAS a murder-suicide


On March 8 in 2014, the Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 disappeared from view


By ANDREW PRENTICE FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA
PUBLISHED: 09:16 EST, 23 February 2022


A bizarre 22-minute manoeuvre could prove the doomed MH370 flight was actually a murder-suicide plot by one of the pilots, a top Australian pilot has claimed.

On March 8 in 2014, the Malaysian Airlines plane disappeared from the skies along with 239 people on board - including six Australians.

They included Queensland couples Catherine and Robert Lawton as well as Mary and Rodney Burrows.

Many wild theories have since followed, but now a flight holding pattern - detected through an invisible trail - may finally provide closure for those who lost loved ones.

In Wednesday night's Sky News documentary MH370: The Final Search, a number of aviation leaders stated it was deliberate sabotage from senior flight Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah - and said a 22-minute-long holding pattern proved it.

'My theory has always been that it was the captain who is responsible …probably as a political protest,' aviation writer and former Qantas Captain Mike Glynn said. 

In Wednesday night's Sky News documentary MH370: The Final Search, a number of aviation experts
stated their belief it was deliberate sabotage from senior flight Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah


This graphic shows the predicted location for MH370's wreckage at the bottom of the Indian Ocean



On March 8 in 2014, the Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 disappeared from the skies with 239 people on board


To support his claim, Mr Glynn pointed to the 'holding pattern' on MH370 from 3.12am onwards.

A holding pattern is where a plane holds a particular flight path while awaiting approval to land, but in this case it was done mid-flight. 

He said there was 'no reason' for the aircraft to engage in the pattern mid-flight, before adding there is a 'possibility' it was the timeframe Mr Shah used as a 'form of negotiation.'

Australian Danica Weeks, whose husband Paul was on board the flight, said the 22-minute holding pattern revelation was 'overwhelming' and that Captain Shah 'must've been talking to someone… it's just a complete cover up.'

Mr Glynn went on to claim Captain Shah, a married father of three, was enraged after Anwar Ibrahim, Malaysia’s Opposition Leader at the time of the crash in 2014, was convicted of sodomy the day before MH370 disappeared.

Shah was said to be an avid supporter of Ibrahim, and the pilot's Facebook account was also labelled a 'treasure trove' of political activity and anti-government sentiment.

Leading aviation safety investigator and retired pilot, John Cox, also said the demise of MH370 was no accident.

Author and journalist Ean Higgins agreed, stating Mr Shah had enough motivation if he wanted to take the 'drastic action.'

The pilot did have a supporter in Malaysia Airlines Crisis Director Fuad Sharuji, who expressed his doubt over a possible plane hijack.

The final point of control tower contact with flight MH370 almost eight years ago was over the South China Sea, the location where the search first launched following the disappearance, which generated international headlines.

However, it soon became apparent the plane had made its way back in the direction of Malaysia.

The aircraft then flew over the Malay peninsula, went around the island of Penang and up the Malacca Strait and eventually over the southern Indian Ocean.

Mr Glynn went on to state the use of Weak Signal Propagation Report (WSPR), could help locate the final remains of the plane.

The modern technology is a network of signals that use amateur or hand radios, and has been in use since 2009.

The pilot believes MH370 may have been tracked by WSPR - and that could pinpoint where the remains are.

'It is a game changer,' he said.

==============================================================================================


Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Fascinating and Terrifying New Theory on the Disappearance of MH370

..
What really happened to Flight MH370?

Seven years after the disappearance of a Malaysia Airlines plane, a French investigative journalist says she's getting closer to the truth
By Martin Fletcher, The Telegraph
30 January 2021 • 6:00am

When Flight MH370 disappeared, conspiracy theories quickly emerged  CREDIT: AP Images

Nobody disputes the initial facts – not even Florence de Changy, a French journalist whose new book on the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 is about to revive the greatest mystery in aviation history.

At 00:42 on 8 March 2014, MH370 took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport bound for Beijing. On board the Boeing 777 were two pilots, 10 flight attendants and 227 passengers of 14 different nationalities. They included Chinese labourers and package- holiday tourists going home, a group of calligraphers, a stuntman who was working on a new Netflix series, and 20 employees of a US electronics company. Five were children.

At 01:01 MH370 reached its cruising altitude of 35,000ft as it flew north over the South China Sea. At 01:19, as it left Malaysian airspace and crossed into Vietnam’s, Zaharie Ahmad Shah, the captain, radioed back the last words heard from the flight: ‘Good night Malaysian Three Seven Zero.’

Normal procedure is that the aircraft should then declare its presence to Vietnamese air traffic control but no call came. A minute later the plane’s transponder – its link to air traffic control – cut off.

Almost immediately its Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System (ACARS), which transmits technical information about flights, ceased working too. Thereafter MH370 simply vanished.

It issued no distress call. It had displayed no sign of trouble. On a clear night, in good flying conditions, one of the world’s safest aircraft, operated by an airline with an excellent safety record, disappeared in a region full of civilian and military radar stations and heavily monitored by satellites.

Seven years later, incredibly, its fate remains unknown.

The search effort begins
For a week, scores of ships and planes searched the South China Sea for traces of the missing plane. Then, on 15 March, Najib Razak, Malaysia’s then-prime minister, announced startling new findings. He said that an aircraft believed (but not confirmed) to be MH370 had been detected suddenly changing course after entering Vietnamese airspace.

He also advanced the theory that these movements were ‘consistent with deliberate action by someone on the plane’. That is the point at which de Changy starts taking issue with an official narrative which she dismisses as a ‘fabrication’.

According to that narrative, Malaysian military radar had spotted a plane climbing and descending steeply as it flew back across the Malay peninsula, veered up the Malacca Strait and round the northern tip of Sumatra into the Indian Ocean.



Thereafter Inmarsat, a satellite telecommunications company, picked up occasional electronic ‘pings’ from the aircraft. From those pings, scientists calculated that MH370 may have flown six hours southwards after rounding Sumatra before crashing into the sea more than a thousand miles west of Australia, having presumably run out of fuel.

The narrative was subsequently reinforced by the discovery, a year later, of debris apparently belonging to MH370 washed up on the beaches of southern Africa and the island of Réunion on the far side of the Indian Ocean.

Inmarsat’s calculations triggered the most expensive search in aviation history. For nearly three years, at a cost of well over £100 million, more than 100 ships and dozens of aircraft from 24 countries scoured 120,000 square kilometres of ocean. They found nothing except a pair of 19th-century shipwrecks.

In 2017 the underwater search was called off and the Australian Transport Safety Bureau, which coordinated it, issued a report that said it was ‘almost inconceivable’ that a plane could simply go missing in the modern age.

A distraught relative of a Flight 370 passenger waits for news at a Beijing hotel CREDIT: AFP via Getty Images

In 2018, to the dismay of the victims’ relatives, a final report by an official investigation team, comprising experts from Malaysia, Australia, the US, China, Britain, Indonesia, Singapore and France, likewise failed to explain MH370’s disappearance, though it did not rule out ‘unlawful interference by a third party’.

Inside the conspiracy theories
Conspiracy theories thrive in vacuums. This case was no exception. Fuelled by the lack of hard facts and by the opacity, contradictions and apparent inconsistencies of the authorities, they proliferated.

Some were manifestly crazy. MH370 had vanished into a black hole, or been captured by aliens, or seized for use in another 9/11-style attack. The missing plane was said to be in Somalia, Kazakhstan or North Korea, or rumoured to have been destroyed to eliminate witnesses to an organ-harvesting scheme run by a top Chinese official’s son.

Other theories were superficially more plausible. A terrorist hijacking was a leading contender, but why would the captain in his fortified cockpit not have issued any sort of alarm? Why would the terrorists not have claimed responsibility or made demands? Why would they fly the plane to the middle of the sea, not an airport? And none of the passengers were deemed likely hijackers.

Another possibility was a fire or some sort of catastrophic accident, leading to a lack of oxygen that swiftly killed all those on board. Certainly there was a consignment of potentially flammable lithium-ion batteries in the hold. But the cockpit had its own emergency oxygen supply, and would the plane really have followed the erratic course it did on automatic pilot?

The leading theory, encouraged by the former Australian prime minister Tony Abbott, who was in office when MH370 vanished, was that the pilot was suicidal and deliberately crashed the plane into the sea. ‘I want to be absolutely crystal clear, it was understood at the highest levels that this was almost certainly murder-suicide by the pilot,’ he told a Sky News documentary last year.

Australian pm Tony Abbott declared the crash ‘murder-suicide’ CREDIT: AFP via Getty Images

Zaharie Ahmad Shah’s marriage was rumoured to have been in difficulty. A flight simulator in his house had allegedly been used to plot a course to the southern Indian Ocean. But investigators concluded that the data wasn’t incriminating, and the official investigation found no evidence that Zaharie, who had an exemplary 16-year record of flying Boeing 777s, was suffering mental health problems.

If he was bent on suicide, why would his co-pilot, Fariq Abdul Hamid, not have tried to stop him? And unless he craved one final ‘joyride’, why would he not have crashed the plane immediately?

Who is Florence de Changy?
De Changy, 53, is no crank. Personable and articulate, she is a reputable journalist who has covered South East Asia for Le Monde and Radio France for two decades. She previously lived in Malaysia for three years and is now based in Hong Kong.

The day MH370 went missing she was visiting her childhood home in Verona and heard the news on the radio of her rented car. ‘My first thought was, what a shame I’m not nearby because there was a chance Le Monde would send me,’ she recalls in a Skype call from her houseboat in Hong Kong.

The day she returned to Hong Kong, one week later, Najib Razak announced that MH370 had been deliberately diverted. Before she could unpack, Le Monde dispatched her to Kuala Lumpur. At that point, she says, ‘You have no reason to doubt what they told you… it’s natural to be gullible’.

French journalist Florence de Changy, whose new book delves into the mystery of MH370 CREDIT: John Javellana

On the first anniversary of the plane’s disappearance she wrote a long article in which she was considerably more sceptical about the official narrative. That led to a book, published in 2016, in which she cautiously suggested the lost plane might not be in the Indian Ocean at all, but in the South China Sea where it was originally presumed to have crashed.

‘I was almost embarrassed with what I was coming up with,’ she says. ‘I didn’t want to go there. You know it’s very bad to be a conspiracy theorist.’

But the book prompted people to approach her with new information and before she knew it, she was ‘down the rabbit hole’.

Since then, she has visited at least 15 countries on four continents in her quest for the truth. She has interviewed hundreds of people, from fishermen in the Maldives who claimed to have seen a huge plane labouring low and noisily over their remote island early on the morning MH370 went missing, to a former officer of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army who shared her suspicion of the official narrative.

‘The whole narrative is an insult to human intelligence,’ she says. ‘It’s really crazy. It doesn’t make sense to tell the world that we’ve lost track of a Boeing 777… If, as a journalist, I don’t react to that then I might as well go and sell socks or ties.’

Where did the plane go down?
De Changy’s first and unequivocal contention in her new book, The Disappearing Act, which is published next week, is that indeed MH370 went down in the South China Sea, as first suspected, not thousands of miles away in the Indian Ocean.

She points to the lack of a single radar image conclusively showing the plane heading west then south, even though two major military exercises were taking place near its alleged route. In her book, she suggests the few images that do exist might have been of other planes, and that the erratic flight pattern of the plane said to be MH370 exceeded the performance capabilities of a Boeing 777.

Thereafter, she argues that ‘no one – not one single person, not a radar, not a ship, not a satellite, not a military base, not another plane – saw MH370 above the southern Indian Ocean’, and that the largest search operation ever mounted ‘failed to find a shred of evidence’ that it crashed there.

And what of those electronic ‘pings’ that indicated the plane had continued flying for hours? ‘This despotic set of pings had, I felt, imposed its version of the truth on the whole world,’ she writes. She suggests that they might have been generated in some other way, possibly by other planes.

As for the ‘avalanche of debris’ discovered on the shores of Réunion and southern Africa, she insists that the supposed ‘finds’ amounted to collective wishful thinking and had nothing to do with MH370. She writes: ‘“Highly likely” and “almost certain” were very soon the buzz phrases used to qualify any kind of debris collected in the south-western part of the Indian Ocean that bore even the remotest possibility of having come from MH370.’

The official narrative, de Changy concludes, ‘has every semblance of a decoy’.

It’s quite a claim. But she’s not finished. ‘Almost seven years after the loss of the plane, the authorities’ version of what happened to MH370 is even less credible than when it first surfaced,’ she writes. ‘The primary function of the sub-sea search led by Australia in international waters was simply to keep people’s attention focused somewhere, just like the diversion that any magician employs to mask his sleight of hand.’

De Changy then marshals the evidence supporting her contention that the plane went down in the South China Sea. It includes contemporary Vietnamese news reports to that effect; a mysterious message from Vietnamese air traffic control to its Malaysian counterpart at 02:40 saying ‘the plane is landing’; Chinese media reports of an SOS from the pilot at 02:43 requesting an emergency landing because his plane was disintegrating; Chinese satellite images of apparent debris littering the water; and two large oil slicks allegedly spotted off Vietnam’s coast.

2018: a girl has her face painted during the Day of Remembrance for MH370 event in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia CREDIT: AP

She says villagers and fishermen along Malaysia’s north-eastern coast reported unusual sights and sounds including explosions early that morning, and a New Zealand oil worker, Michael McKay, reported seeing a ‘burning plane’ in the sky from his platform off the southern tip of Vietnam.

Evidence was ‘ignored, dismissed, denied or just erased’, she claims. High-resolution satellite images of the South China Sea that might have identified floating debris were later mysteriously unavailable. An unedited transcript of all the exchanges between MH370 and Malaysian air traffic control during its 42 minutes of flight was never published.

De Changy also claims that, in a change from usual practice, movements for ships of the US Seventh Fleet, based in Japan, were not published on the website of US Pacific Command for a month each side of MH370’s disappearance.

Having interviewed Zaharie’s friends and relatives, she also asserts that he was the ‘target of a relentless smear campaign’ and ‘never had the slightest of deadly intentions’. He was a ‘perfectly sane and happy pilot, operating at the top of his game’. If he was the culprit, he did ‘what no one else has ever managed to do: lose his plane and all those on board for ever, without leaving the slightest trace’.

Pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah CREDIT: Sim

De Changy cannot be faulted for her tenacity, but three aviation experts who have followed the case gave little credence to her claim that MH370 lies in the South China Sea. ‘I think it’s pretty far-fetched,’ says a former senior British government official who declined to be named.

‘This is just nonsense. We know where the aircraft went down,’ says Duncan Steel, one of several independent scientists, engineers and mathematicians who pooled their expertise in order to try to solve the mystery.

David McMillan, former chair of the global Flight Safety Foundation, allowed some ‘room for doubt’ given the lack of hard facts, but added: ‘The broad consensus is that people were looking in pretty much the right place.’

Relatives of the victims were similarly sceptical. ‘As of now, the only evidence we have is that the plane ended its flight in the southern Indian Ocean,’ says Grace Subathirai Nathan, a Malaysian lawyer whose mother was on board MH370. Journalists like de Changy are free to pursue their investigations, she adds, ‘but it’s not easy to constantly have to talk about it, constantly have to remember it'.

KS Narendran, a development consultant, who lives in Chennai, lost his wife on MH370. In a Skype call, he said of the official narrative: ‘It doesn’t add up. It doesn’t square up. There’s nothing conclusive about it.’ But neither did he endorse de Changy’s theory.

De Changy’s hypothesis also begs the question: why would anyone want to conceal the fact that MH370 crashed into the South China Sea, if indeed it did?

'A massive blunder of unspeakable proportions'
In the book’s final chapter she attempts to answer that. She believes that the story was designed to detract from ‘a massive blunder of unspeakable proportions’ – namely that the plane was shot down. And she proceeds to sketch out a hypothetical scenario which, despite some ‘holes’, she believes to be ‘80 per cent’ correct.

In it, MH370 was carrying stolen technology, perhaps a powerful spying device. The US had to stop that precious load reaching China. It dispatched two Awacs planes to jam MH370’s communication systems, effectively rendering it invisible, then force it to land at a nearby military airport where the cargo could be removed. When Zaharie refused to land, the Americans shot the plane down before it entered Chinese airspace.

‘The shooting down could have been a blunder, but it could also have been a last resort to stop the plane and its special cargo from falling into China’s hands,’ she writes.

De Changy contends that the US and China had obvious reasons to conceal the truth, and that her scenario, though hypothetical, is ‘based on a cluster of solid clues’. She goes on to claim that stories were planted to promote the official narrative.

Is this the wildest conspiracy theory of all? Is de Changy merely the latest MH370 obsessive to be sucked into what she calls ‘the dark recesses of the labyrinth’ of this mystery?

A Malaysia Airlines employee writes a message of prayer at Kuala Lumpur airport a week after the crash
CREDIT:  AFP via Getty Images

The relatives of some victims are reluctant to believe it. Grace Nathan said it sounded ‘quite far-fetched’, adding: ‘It’s highly impossible all this happened in a short span of 20 minutes, completely unnoticed.’ KS Narendran observed that ‘there are easier ways for a government such as the US to deliver things that it wants to, or eliminate people if it chooses to’ than shooting down a commercial airliner.

Moreover, if de Changy’s scenario were true, hundreds of people in many different countries and organisations would be complicit, and the secret would surely have spilt by now.

On the other hand, if the USAF was willing to shoot down a plane full of civilians to protect a secret, why would anyone feel safe coming forward.

De Changy acknowledges that, but says she is confident people will yet come forward with the final bits of the jigsaw. ‘I’m almost there,’ she insists.

The official investigation has long concluded and only a secretive French judicial investigation continues into who or what killed four of its citizens on that flight. But in a final push for the truth, de Changy dedicates her book to ‘all those who know something more’ – those ‘who are duty bound to reveal their share of the truth and end the terrible distress of the victims’ loved ones’.

The Disappearing Act, by Florence de Changy, is out on Thursday (HarperCollins, £14.99); preorder it now at books.telegraph.co.uk