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MH370 Latest Update: Top Airlines Boss Suspicious That No One Knows Where The Plane Is, Saying It Is Too Advance To Disappear Just Like That

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A boss of a massive airline has expressed dissatisfaction over the progress, or lack thereof, of the investigation of the mysterious disappearance of flight MH370. He even said that the procedures being taken by search parties should be shaken up. Tim Clark , president and CEO of Emirates Airlines, expressed doubts that the Malaysian airplane lost control while traveling from Kuala Lumpur to Malaysia. The MH370, a Boeing 777-200ER aircraft type, is an international passenger flight that disappeared less than one hour since it took off on March 8 of this year. More than six months later, the whole world is still clueless on the whereabouts of the Malaysian plane or whether its 239 passengers are still alive.

"MH370 was, in my opinion, under control, probably until the very end," Clark said of the MH370.

"Our experience tells us that in water incidents, where the aircraft has gone down, there is always something.

"We have not seen a single thing that suggests categorically that this aircraft is where they say it is, apart from this so-called electronic satellite 'handshake', which I question as well."

Clark is also skeptic with how MH370 flight disappeared that easy arguing it is too advance to be that hard to track.

"The Boeing 777 is already one of the most advanced planes in the world, with the most modern communications systems."

"There hasn't been one over-water incident in the history of civil aviation - apart from Amelia Earhart in 1939 - that has not been at least 5 or 10% trackable.

"But MH370 has simply disappeared. For me, that raises a degree of suspicion. I'm totally dissatisfied with what has been coming out of all of this," he told the magazine.

The lack of good MH370 news over the past months baffles not only the relatives of passengers but also Clark. For him, those who were affected shouldn't be left in the dark.

"There is plenty of information out there, which we need to be far more forthright, transparent and candid about.

"Every single second of that flight needs to be examined up until it, theoretically, ended up in the Indian Ocean - for which they still haven't found a trace, not even a seat cushion."

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