News about Najib Razak

Timeline of the MH370 mystery: A decade ago, the Malaysia Airlines flight went from unknown to unknown

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 8, 2024
The Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, which went from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, went missing less than a decade after takeoff. Despite a search area of 46,332 square miles being covered, the largest in aviation history, it went off-grid carrying 239 people who were all presumed dead. A few pieces of the aircraft have since been discovered, but a few theories have surfaced about what - and who - caused the flight to change course. The Malaysian government sponsored a new 'no find, no fee' search off the coast of Australia in the week leading up to the tenth anniversary of MH370's disappearance.

Who was MH370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah? An indepth look at the plane's captain's life at the helm of the missing aircraft

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 8, 2024
Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, was pilot of the fateful Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which was postponed to MH370, which went missing on March 8, 2014. The MH370 had intended to fly from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing but it crashed off radars shortly after takeoff. All 239 people on board were accounted for. The BBC has a look back at how the plane went missing in their documentary Why Planes Vanish: The Search for MH370. But what of its veteran pilot who had thousands of hours of flight time under his belt, and lived a seemingly idyllic life? Learn more about Zaharie Ahmad Shah and the rumors surrounding him following the flight's disappearance here.

MH370 - the mystery that stunned the world: Ten years later, we examine the claims, the fight for a new discovery, and the clues that point to a tragic tragedy

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 8, 2024
MH370, a plane carrying 239 people, blasted off Malaysian radar screens ten years ago, sparking one of the world's biggest aviation mysteries that has never been figured out to this date. Despite the biggest search in aviation history, which found 46,332 square miles of the southern Indian Ocean's sea floor, only a few fragments of the Boeing 777-200ER plane, scattered on beaches thousands of miles apart. In January 2017, the operation was suspended. The families of those who were lost to the abyss have long hoped that by finding the missing plane, authorities would finally be able to give them an answer to the question that has haunted them for a decade: What happened to their loved ones? MailOnline looks back on the MH370 tragedy as they commemorate ten years since their loved ones were missing.

MH370 - the'shameful truth': Malaysia knows what happened to the doomed plane but refuses to reveal the pilot's identity... who was obsessed with model twins.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 8, 2024
Malaysia knows where the wreckage of the doomed Flight MH370 aeroplane is, but refuses to accept the'shameful truth' about the crash, according to Australia's top aviation specialist. MH370's remains lie 1933 kilometers west of Perth, according to Geoffrey Thomas, a 50-year aviation veteran, and the plane's flight path since it was basically hijacked by its pilot has now been established. Mr Thomas said aerospace engineer Richard Godfrey, who has followed the course of a plane using radio waves, believes one more look in 2024 will reveal the final resting place of MH370's.'

Pilot explains how those in charge of MH370 could have easily carried out a plot to deliberately crash

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 18, 2024
A retired Qantas pilot has shared his own opinion about the crash that occurred nearly ten years ago. The puzzling case caused worldwide news because it appeared that the plane, which carried 239 passengers, including six Australians, vanished without a trace. According to one, the incident was a murder-suicide in the hands of captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, but no one has been confirmed by authorities.

Following the High Court's ruling, Malaysian hitman Sirul Azhar Umar begs to stay in Australia

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 26, 2023
Since being released on a High Court order after being convicted of a politically motivated assault on a Mongolian model whose body was blown up, a man who was found innocent has pleaded innocent as he fights to stay in Australia. Sirul Azhar Umar, a former Malaysian bodygaurd, escaped from Malaysia but was found in absentia and sentenced to death in late 2014 for the murder of Mongolian national Altantuya Shaariibuu in 2006. Sirul, 52, is one of at least 111 prisoners released after the High Court's finding that indefinite immigration detention was unlawful, and he says Australians have nothing to fear from him as he seeks a new family life.

My pregnant daughter was compelled to a forest and shot twice in the head before her killer blew up her body with military bombs. Since the High Court's ruling, he's now walking in Australia – and no one told me

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 17, 2023
Altantuya Shaariibuu (left), a Mongolian mother of two who died in 2006 after being led to a forest on Kuala Lumpur's outskirts and fired twice in the head by hitman Sirul Azhar Umar (right) as she pleaded for mercy. Sirul, who had been a bodyguard for former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, detonated her body with military explosives. In January 2015, he left Malaysia for Australia, where he was arrested and detained indefinitely at Sydney's Villawood immigration detention center. However, nearly nine years later, Sirul has walked free and is now roaming Canberra's streets following the High Court's decision to release up to 92 hardened foreign criminals detained in immigration detention. Altantuya's father Shaariibuu Setev (inset), a Mongolian film professor, was not informed that his daughter's killer had been freed

Moment Home Affairs minister Clare O'Neil erupts after 80 asylum seekers - including three murderers and multiple sex offenders - are released into the community - but there's one big problem

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 14, 2023
Following the High Court's decision that the unconditional detention of certain non-citizens unlawfully imprisoned for certain non-citizens was not allowed, a number of 80 criminals were released into the community, triggering fear and panic among the general population. Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil (left and right) and Immigration Minister Andrew Giles have agreed to take'immediate action' to keep the community safe. The government opposed this decision, although the duo released a statement in a statement that law enforcement agencies are still trying to place tougher limits on these criminals around the clock. However, Ms O'Neil and Mr Giles are hindered by the fact that the High Court has yet to give the decision, limiting the government's immediate court action.

NZYQ High Court decision: 80 asylum seekers - including a paedophile and a hitman - are now roaming Australia's streets after a High Court decision

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 12, 2023
Following the High Court's ruling, a migrant who assaulted a 10-year-old boy was allowed back into the community. The main decision resulted in the freeing of up to 92 other non-citizens detained in detention who could not be deported to their home countries.

After the High Court ruled that indefinite immigration detention unlawful in Australia, a Malaysian hitman walks free

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 11, 2023
After a High Court decision against unconditional detention, a man who committed a horrific murder in his home country of Malaysia is now free in Australia. Sirul Azahr Umar (pictured left), 51, was sentenced to death for the 2006 murder of Altantuya Shaariibuu (pictured right), the pregnant mother of a political agent, whom he killed and then blew up the body.

For a 1MDB plan, an ex-Goldman Sachs banker was sentenced to ten years in prison

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 9, 2023
A former Goldman Sachs banker was sentenced to ten years in jail for looting billions of dollars used to fund lavish parties, a superyacht, luxury real estate, and even the 2013 film 'The Wolf of Wall Street.' Roger Ng was found by a U.S. District Court judge in Brooklyn last April, but he denies charges that he planned to embelect money and breached two anti-bribery laws. Ng and his co-conspirators donated $6.5 billion via bond auctions, but only to participate in a program that siphoned off more than half of the money, some of which went to pay bribes and kickbacks, according to investigators.