Letterhead

US Officials Denied Reports on Diego Garcia MH370 Conspiracy

 US officials denied reports that flight MH370 had landed in US Naval Base in Diego Garcia. US official said that the allegations are not true and there are no basis and evidence about this. US military is helping with 27 nations finding Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 in Indian Ocean. US said that MH370 crashed in Indian Ocean and it had not landed in Diego Garcia.

The alleged reports said that US diverted flight MH370 path turning to Diego Garcia at and what happened was US maneuvered all signals remotely. This skiptism became a hot topic and viral after many weeks finding MH370 without clear evidence that it crashed in Indian Ocean.

Missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 may have flown into tiny island called Diego Garcia. Diego Garcia is a remotely located atoll in the Indian Ocean. The lonely island in the middle of the Indian Ocean is home to a U.S. Naval base and is now speculated to have answers to the MH370 mystery, according to News.com.au.
This conspiracy theory is the latest addition to several other theories concerning different locations. Propagators of this theory believe that the little island maybe the actual location where MH370 landed after being hijacked and can now be found in. The island is said to be "one of the world's most remote locations," which allegedly has a "secret prison." The island reportedly has no indigenous inhabitants as they were forcibly removed and were asked to relocate on other locations such as Chagos Archipelago, Seychelles and Mauritius in the year 1971.

Diego Garcia is located 4700 km northwest of the Australia and has 1700 military personnel and 1500 civilian contractors residing there.

The lonely island reportedly has a runway that can accommodate a plane as big as Boeing 777. Therefore, Diego Garcia is now considered to be the potential location where missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 can be found, according to the conspiracy theory.

The theory became the subject of speculation when it was figured that MH370's pilot Captain Zaharie Shah's flight simulator had Diego Garcia's runway location stored in it. Earlier, FBI reported that there was "nothing sinister" about the homemade flight simulator and files stored in it. But reports claiming that the plane was "deliberately" taken off the radar detection have drawn attention towards the pilot of MH370 yet again.

Furthermore, an American freelance journalist Jim Stone is advocating the theory that claims MH370 may have landed in Diego Garcia island. In his blog, Jim Stone has reportedly presented "a bewildering array of theories about major news events."

The blogger claims that Philip Wood an American passenger travelling in the now missing flight MH370 did manage to send a message. The text contained information including GPS coordinates that presented a location that is just few kilometers away from the Indian Ocean island Diego Garcia. The text revealed that Philip Wood has been held hostage by some unknown military personnel, according to News.com.au.

MH370 passenger Philip Wood is said to be an IBM engineer. Examiner further explains Jim Stone's Diego Garcia conspiracy theory. The theory states that the intention behind taking the plane is concerning 20 top employees of Freescale Semiconductor Inc. on the flight. These people reportedly worked on the development of semiconductor and were soon going to get it patented. But if rest of the people who worked on the project are gone, the patent can be owned by one person named Jacob Rothschild. Another reason behind the plane's disappearance could be that "some government wanted to get their hands on the knowledge held by the 20 top employees to have this microchip built for some reason," as per the report.

However, Metabunk report suggests that it is not difficult to "fake a mobile phone's GPS coordinates," and denies the truth behind the Diego Garcia conspiracy theory. News.com.au notes that the information of missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 suggests that the plane ended in the southern Indian Ocean.

Post a Comment

0 Comments