The fruitless MH370 search has breathed new life into conspiracy theories on the plane´s fate, with a book, two films and even a former prime minister pushing ideas ranging from diversion by the CIA to an accidental shoot-down.
A host of wild theories including a Taliban hijack or meteor strike had emerged to fill the information vacuum in the days following the plane’s disappearance on March 8 with 239 aboard as authorities across Asia scrambled to figure out what happened. In a blog posting Sunday, former Malaysian premier Mahathir Mohamad put his weight behind online rumours that the Boeing 777 had a feature allowing the plane´s controls to be taken over remotely.
Mahathir, 88, said the US Central Intelligence Agency might have taken control of the American-made plane after it was commandeered by terrorists, adding it was possible “the plane is somewhere, maybe without MAS (Malaysia Airlines) markings”.
“Can it not be that the pilot of MH370 lost control of their aircraft after someone directly or remotely activated the equipment for seizure of control of the aircraft?” Mahathir wrote.
Two films about MH370 were touted Sunday to potential distributors at the Cannes Film Festival in France, with a trailer for one of them — “The Vanishing Act” — showing terrified passengers and a gun being brandished.
The film was pitched as “the untold story of the missing Malaysian plane”.
One of the first books about MH370 went on sale Monday, suggesting it could have been shot down during a military drill in the South China Sea and the incident covered-up.