A sign at Kuala Lumpur International Airport carries messages of hope for the Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 that went missing on Saturday. Daniel Chan / AP Photo / March 10, 2014
A sign at Kuala Lumpur International Airport carries messages of hope for the Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 that went missing on Saturday. Daniel Chan / AP Photo / March 10, 2014

Investigation of missing Malaysian plane turns to stolen passports



PATTAYA, Thailand // Investigators yesterday questioned travel agents in Thailand about two men who boarded the vanished Malaysia Airlines plane with stolen passports, as authorities expanded their search for traces of the aircraft.

Nearly three days after the Boeing 777 with 239 people on board disappeared en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, no debris has been seen in South-east Asian waters.

Five passengers who checked in for Flight MH370 did not board the plane, and their luggage was removed from it, Malaysian authorities said. The Malaysian transport minister, Hishammuddin Hussein, said this also was being investigated, but he did not say whether this was suspicious.

The search effort, involving at least 34 aircraft and 40 ships from several countries, was being widened to a 185-kilometre radius from the point the plane vanished from radar screens between Malaysia and Vietnam early on Saturday with no distress signal.

The two passengers travelling on passports stolen in Thailand had onward tickets to Europe, but it is not known whether the men had anything to do with the plane’s disappearance. Criminals and illegal migrants regularly travel on fake or stolen documents.

Mr Hishammuddin said biometric information and CCTV footage of the men has been shared with Chinese and US intelligence agencies, who were helping the investigation. Almost two-thirds of the passengers on the flight were from China.

The stolen passports, one belonging to Christian Kozel of Austria and the other to Luigi Maraldi of Italy, were entered into Interpol’s database after they were taken in Thailand in 2012 and 2013, the police organisation said.

Electronic booking records show that one-way tickets with those names were issued on Thursday from a travel agency in the beach resort of Pattaya in eastern Thailand. Colonel Supachai Phuykaeokam of the Thai police said the reservations were placed with the agency by a second travel agency in Pattaya, Grand Horizon.

Thai police and Interpol officers questioned the owners.

Police Lt Col Ratchthapong Tia-sood said the travel agency was contacted by an Iranian man known only as “Mr Ali” to book the tickets for the two men.

“We have to look further into this Mr Ali’s identity because it’s almost a tradition to use an alias when doing business around here,” he said.

The travel agency’s owner, Benjaporn Krutnait, told The Financial Times she believed Mr Ali was not connected to terrorism because he had asked for the cheapest tickets to Europe and did not specify the Kuala Lumpur to Beijing flight.

Malaysia’s police chief was quoted by local media as saying that one of the two men had been identified – something that could speed up the investigation.

Possible causes of the apparent crash include an explosion, catastrophic engine failure, terrorist attack, extreme turbulence, pilot error or even suicide, according to experts, many of whom cautioned against speculation because so little is known.

On Sunday, a Vietnamese plane spotted a rectangular object that was thought to be one of the plane’s doors, but ships could not locate it. On Monday, a Singaporean search plane spotted a yellow object 140km south-west of Tho Chu island, but it turned out to be rubbish.

Malaysian maritime officials found oil slicks in the South China Sea, but lab tests found that samples of it were not from an aircraft, Malaysia’s civil aviation chief, Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, said.

* Associated Press