The Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is now reported to have been flown towards Antarctica.
According to Malay Mail the aviation disaster experts are claiming that the MH370 have been "flown deliberately off-course towards" the Antarctica, in a documentary on the National Geographic that will be aired next month.
The experts believe that the missing jetliner had flown hours before losing its contact and the aircraft made a turn to the left, then followed by two more turns that led it westwards before headed towards the Antarctica.
Furthermore, the Joint Agency Co-ordination Centre, which headed by Australia is currently conducting the search. The Daily Mail reported that Australian Transport Safety Bureau Commissioner Martin Dolan said that he is hopeful to find the wreckage of the aircraft.
"I don't wake up every day thinking 'This will be the day' but I do wake up every day hoping this will be it, and expecting that sometime between now and May that will be the day," Dolan told News Corp according to the Daily Mail.
"As we keep on pointing out, we don't have a certainty only a confidence that we'll find the missing aircraft," he added.
Meanwhile, in Malaysia on Feb. 20, a group of Chinese relatives arrived at Kuala Lumpur airport wearing red T-shirts with a slogan "Pray for MH370," with placards that read: "Today it's us, tomorrow it could be you."
The relatives of the passengers of the said aircraft are also asking answers from the government and Malaysia Airlines. One of which is the answer as to why did the Malaysian government announced that the tragic loss of lives on MH370 was an accident.
Wen Wancheng, a father whose son was on the flight, said that there is no legal basis to announce that MH370 was an accident.
The flight MH370 vanished on March 8, 2014 while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, with 239 people on board.