How far have we advanced in the search
for the missing aeroplane MH370?
Not far, it seems.
Theories, as one might expect, abound but
none of them have drawn us, realistically, any closer to finding the Boeing 777
or, more importantly, its passengers.
These are trying times for the relatives
and friends of those on board. Although the focus seems to be on the two thirds
of the pax who are Chinese it must be remembered that the others are equally
important. There are, for example, three Australians on board whose lives are
just as important to their relatives and friends as are the lives of those who
live in China.
I was bemused to hear, on an American
based news channel, that the US has already ‘poured fifty million dollars’ into
the search effort. Really? I am considerably underwhelmed. There were, I
believe, Americans on board whose families will rile at the suggestion that supplying
insurgents with weaponry to the tune of far in excess of fifty million dollars
(US Dollars, one presumes) is money better spent than in trying to discover what
has happened to their kin.
This is not a political rant. It is a
point of disgust at the media who, even now, are trying to lay blame and create
sensational headlines where none exist.
We have been through the suggestions that
the crew are to blame, that the engineering staff are to blame, that the cargo loaders
are to blame where, in truth, nobody knows.
Nobody.
We have suffered the enduring complaints
against the Malaysian Government who are, if we are to be realistic about this,
blameless. They have acted in the best interests of everybody throughout.
There are few countries, if any, in the
World that could have done better under these circumstances. Of course there
are ‘National Interests’ in play just as there were ‘National’ and ‘Corporate’
interests in play when the Americans and the British were said to be slow in
giving up information.
The truth is that these people were not
slow. Nobody has been slow. Data needs time to be decoded and decrypted.
Last year there were close to thirty four
million departures from airports worldwide. Finding one flight among those,
even when you know the time and date, is like the proverbial needle in a
haystack. That this aircraft was not fitted with the latest technology is
excusable; every airline wants to cut costs, there is no bottomless pit in the
middle of one of their hangars containing funds to upgrade equipment or, for
that matter, personnel.
There is now a clue. A possible clue.
Débris has been found in the South Indian
Ocean over fifteen hundred miles from Perth, Australia.
Whether it is part of the missing
airliner we do not know but it is worth checking.
Note that: ‘...we do not know...”
At some point the search will grind to a
halt. The reasons for the missing aircraft will be in a file labelled ‘Unsolved’.
No doubt accusations will reverberate
around the Globe in the media and in political circles for a long time.
We can only hope that, before the cash
and the will to go on runs out something will be found, something that will
bring closure to the families and friends of all on board—including the crews.
Until then, we do not know. We are still
guessing, we are still speculating.
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