While the search for MH370 was suspended, a veteran aviation expert spoke up with a shocking statement: he knows what really happened to MH370.
After more than 10 years since MH370 disappeared without a trace, the Malaysian government confirmed that the search for MH370 has been suspended and will resume at the end of this year. However, lead engineer Ismail Hammad of Egyptian airline EgyptAir confirmed that this was a holiday, and the perpetrator almost committed the perfect crime in the night, leaving the world in confusion for more than a decade.
Speaking to The Mirror, Hammad argued that if the plane robber really wanted MH370 to become a mystery that has lasted for hundreds of years, then falling off Perth (Australia) would be... unreasonable.
The stolen plane will not fly thousands of kilometers across the ocean at night to land in water that is easily predictable by fuel consumption, he stressed. Instead, the ideal destination is an abandoned runway or lake in the metade of more than 7,600 islands in the Philippine archipelago.
With a series of small airports that used to serve military or civilian purposes but are now forgotten, Egyptian experts believe that MH370 could have landed or crashed in a place that no radar could have tracked.
A key element in Hammad's theoretical approach is control. No matter how dense the pilots are, flying for 9 hours at night, on the vast ocean, along an accurate straight line is impossible, he said.

Not to mention, according to international aviation law, before flights, pilots must spend at least 3 hours checking techniques and documents. With all that pressure, its hard to believe that one person can do the whole journey without making mistakes, he said.
He also pointed out that programming an automatic steering system using spatial coordinates is a complex task, especially if the person in control is not a system expert. In the absence of modern guidance equipment, using magnetic tables or relying on city lighting in the Philippines will be a more feasible option.
From technical analysis and criminal logic, Hammad called on search forces to focus back on the area from the Malacca Strait to western Australia - an area that could reflect the flight direction after MH370 turned away from the original journey to Beijing.
We are wasting time and money in the wrong position. This crime has been carefully calculated, but that is why it leaves its own traces. The important thing is to ask again: why did an air plane disappear in the most confusing way for the whole world?" - Mr. Hammad asked.
MH370 is not simply a missing plane. It is a long-standing wound in the heart of the modern aviation industry, an endless obsession of 239 families, a reminder that in the technology era, there are still mysteries greater than imagined.
Although the hypotheses are still divided, one thing is certain: until the truth is exposed, MH370 will forever be a ghost floating in the night sky - where the perfect crime may have actually occurred.