However, Cambodia has denied international media reports that parts of Malaysia Airlines MH370 may be in the Cambodian jungle, saying it is ready to cooperate with Malaysian authorities if requested to open an investigation into the incident.
According to Khmer Times , Sin Chanserivutha, spokesman and deputy minister of the Cambodian Ministry of Civil Aviation (SSCA), said on May 27: "The information that MH370 crashed in Cambodia is fake. The false media reports and images were published once about 8 years ago, and it was recently revised and published, causing confusion."
The location of the alleged wreckage of MH370
The reaction came after UK-based newspaper The Mirror reported: "MH370 mystery 'solved' by Google Maps as plane still found in Cambodian jungle".
Chanserivutha said that if international researchers or anyone finds or has enough evidence to prove that the Malaysia Airlines plane went missing in the Cambodian jungle, the Cambodian government is ready to cooperate with Malaysian authorities.
Ian Wilson, a British expert, was quoted by The Mirror last Saturday as saying that the remains of the missing Malaysia Airlines plane were scattered in a dense jungle in Cambodia based on photographic evidence he provided.
10 years have passed, but the MH370 incident remains a mystery.
The disappearance of MH370 has triggered the largest search for a plane ever and one of the greatest aviation mysteries of all time. After several failures, the search could resume if Malaysia accepts the options of the US company Ocean Infinity in the near future.
The flight took off from Kuala Lumpur on March 8, 2014 with 227 passengers and 12 crew on board but disappeared en route to Beijing.
Source: https://thanhnien.vn/campuchia-noi-gi-ve-tin-may-bay-mh370-roi-trong-rung-sau-nuoc-nay-185240528074017845.htm
Comment (0)