GB News' latest MH370 report says Egyirpta Ismail Hammad's engineer could help find MH370. The missing plane has become the focus of attention and many searches have been launched over the past decade.
Hammad believes the mysterious disappearance was committed by an unknown group of pilots. "If the non-thief wants to commit the perfect crime and can keep it a secret for hundreds of years, he will have to land in one of the abandoned ice or lake in the mee of the Philippine archipelago, where there are 7,641 islands.
Such runways are widened and ended in seas, lakes or swamps, not flying straight and falling into the sea off Perth city - an area that can be predicted by calculating fuel consumption" - The Mirror quoted Hammad as saying.
MH370 expert Ismail Hammad emphasized: No matter how experienced a pilot is, it is impossible to fly accurately on a straight line on a long route, over a wide area of water, at night for so many consecutive hours.
This experienced aviation expert also pointed out that continuous flights from Malaysia to the southern Indian Ocean will cause the plane to crash before arriving in Perth, Australia.

He explained that if they know the flight route, pilots will orient themselves without having to go to the address book or GPS system. He noted that automatic driving programming would be very difficult if it only relied on coordinates.
"Thus, a single pilot will not be able to continue flying a large aircraft like the B777-200 for 9 hours from takeoff until it disappears, including an average of 3 hours to check the condition of the aircraft and the documents of the aircraft before takeoff according to aviation regulations," he added.
Therefore, he urged the search mission for MH370 to consider the factors he had mentioned, narrowing the search area from the Malacca Strait to the Perth coast.
The latest search effort to search for MH370 by marine robot company Ocean Infinity using more modern search devices has recently suspended the search. Malaysian Transport Minister Anthony Loke told AFP: "They have stopped searching at the moment and will continue searching at the end of this year. Now is not the right season."
The Boeing 777 flight, flight number MH370, carrying 12 crew members and 227 passengers, went missing in March 2014 while flying from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia to Beijing, China. For more than a decade, the disappearance of flight MH370 has been one of the biggest mysteries in the history of modern aviation.