Flight MH370: Paying the Price of 6 Decades Of Nepotism, Racism, Rampant
Corruption And Incompetence
On January 23, 2008 a very peculiar thing happened. Commercial
airspace at one of the world's busiest airports was shut down for over 50
minutes. On that day, an aircraft
without an approved flight plan entered Singapore's airspace.
Immediately, the Republic of Singapore Air Force dispatched a pair of
F-16D fighter jets to intercept the aircraft and escorted it to land at
Singapore Changi Airport.
Upon landing, airport police immediately surrounded the plane.
"At 6.42pm (2142 AEDT), two Republic of Singapore
Air Force (RSAF) F-16 fighters were scrambled to intercept a civilian aircraft, a Cessna 208, which was heading towards Singapore airspace without an
approved flight plan,'' the ministry's director of public affairs, Colonel Darius Lim, said in a statement. "The aircraft was
escorted to land at Singapore Changi Airport."
The above incident highlights the standard operating protocol an Air
Force, Civil Aviation Authority and
Local Police Force needs to follow in the event of an unidentified aircraft
entering it's airspace without an approved flight plan.
However amidst this hoo-ha, there was one small detail worth
noting. The plane took off from Koh Samui, Thailand. And running the full length between
Thailand and Singapore is the land mass of Peninsular Malaysia.
In essence, this means that the Department of Civil
Aviation of Malaysia and the Royal Malaysian Air Force had allowed an unknown aircraft to
invade over 131 thousand square km of sovereign Malaysian territory and despite this occurring over a
period of 3 hours, did not lift a finger to respond.
This incident highlighted a huge security flaw in Malaysia's Air Defence
umbrella. One that if it had patched during any of the subsequent 6 years that
followed, would have prevented a bigger tragedy that came with greater
embarrassment, scrutiny and loss.
6 years later on 8 March 2014, Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 departed
Kuala Lumpur International Airport for Beijing. It never landed at its intended
destination. Instead, less than an hour after take-off, the transponder
was turned off and 3 sets of
military radars tracked the plane flying past Penang and across the breadth of
Malaysia from the Gulf of Thailand towards the Indian Ocean.
Unlike the Cessna airplane in the earlier example which was intercepted
by the RSAF, 3 sets of people manning Malaysia's military radars never sounded any
alarms. The RMAF never dispatched any fighter jets on standby and the Department
of Civil Aviation of Malaysia never shut down Malaysian airspace when a rogue plane very much larger
than a Cessna aircraft flew across its airspace.
Suffice to say, had the Department of Civil Aviation of Malaysia or the
RMAF been doing their job properly as
exemplified by the example given above, we would not have gone 9 days and
counting into a search for a missing and possibly hijacked plane.
Investigators may have recently concluded that the plane had its
transponders deliberately turned off and
its flight plan deliberately altered but it is the greater observing public who
have the biggest conclusion of all: that Malaysian leadership is sorely
incompetent when it comes to handling a crisis.
In this respect, Malaysia has much to learn from its Southern
neighbour.
Had the supposed hijackers targeted a plane flying through a more
efficient jurisdiction, the outcome would have been very different today.
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