KL missing plane: Relatives threaten hunger strike

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BBC Online :
Relatives of the Chinese passengers on the missing Malaysia Airlines flight have threatened a hunger strike if the Malaysian authorities fail to provide more accurate information.
Families vented their anger at a meeting with the airline in Beijing.
Officials in Malaysia say they are trying to narrow the search area, which now covers about 2.24m square nautical miles (7.68m sq km). Flight MH370 went missing on 8 March with 239 people on board.
Some 25 countries are involved in looking for the plane. A total of 153 Chinese nationals were on board the missing aircraft, which was flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
China’s state media has been criticising the Malaysian operation. Some Chinese relatives have said they believe the Malaysian authorities are holding information back and have demanded more clarity.
After a meeting with airline officials on Tuesday, families held a vote on organising a hunger strike.
“What we want is the truth,” said one woman.
“Don’t let the passengers become the victims of a political fight.”
Ahmad Jauhari Yahy, chief executive of Malaysia Airlines, told a news conference on Monday that the airline was doing everything it could for the families.
Meanwhile, following speculation about the pilot’s links to Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, Malaysian Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein has said: “The search for flight MH370 is bigger than politics.” Captain Zaharie Shah was reportedly a supporter of the jailed politician.
Hussein praised the international response to the search efforts and said teams were continuing to search two vast air corridors north and south of the plane’s last known location.
He added that the Malaysian authorities still believed the disappearance was a result of “deliberate action” on the plane. Malaysia says the plane was intentionally diverted and could have flown on either a northern or southern arc from its last known position in the Malacca Straits. China said earlier it had started searching its territory for the aircraft.
Chinese Ambassador to Malaysia Huang Huikang also said background checks had shown no evidence to suggest any of the Chinese passengers had terror links, Xinhua news agency reported. The BBC’s Rupert Wingfield Hayes in Kuala Lumpur says search planes have been grounded because of red tape China said it had also deployed 21 satellites to help with the search.
Meanwhile, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (Amsa) said it had narrowed down its search area in the southern Indian Ocean based on satellite data and analysis of the aircraft’s possible movements.
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