Friday, April 25, 2014

Malaysia Airlines says staff 'held' by Chinese families - The Malay Mail Online


Family members (front) of passengers aboard missing MAS flight MH370 gather for a sit-in protest as security personnel stand guard outside the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, early April 25, 2014. — Reuters picFamily members (front) of passengers aboard missing MAS flight MH370 gather for a sit-in protest as security personnel stand guard outside the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, early April 25, 2014. — Reuters pic KUALA LUMPUR, April 25 — Ten Malaysia Airlines staff were held against their will for hours by Chinese relatives of flight MH370 passengers, the airline said today, at a Beijing hotel that has seen increasingly tense confrontations over the missing plane.


The airline employees were “barred from leaving” a ballroom for more than 10 hours yesterday, and another staff member was kicked in the leg in a confrontation two days earlier, the airline said.


Tempers have repeatedly flared at the Lido Hotel, where Chinese relatives have been put up by the airline since the plane vanished, increasingly lashing out in briefings as Malaysian officials and the flag carrier have been unable to explain the plane’s disappearance.


“Malaysia Airlines confirms that its staff were held at the Lido Hotel ballroom in Beijing by the family members of MH370 as the families expressed dissatisfaction in obtaining details of the missing aircraft on 24 April 2014 at 3pm,” it said in a statement released in Kuala Lumpur.


The more than 200 family members were incensed when a Malaysian government official did not come to brief them yesterday, and the meeting descended into chaos as relatives angrily confronted airline staff.


An airline spokesman told AFP “the main MAS officials were barred from leaving the ballroom” as about 60 family members left for the Malaysian Embassy to demand information from government officials.


“The group finally released the staff at 1.44am, 25 April 2014,” the airline’s statement said.


The relatives who went to the embassy remained there in an overnight protest, two participants said today.


The carrier also said a Malaysia Airlines security supervisor was “kicked in the left knee” by an “aggressive” Chinese family member at the hotel on Tuesday.


The airline said it had filed a police report on the incident.






  • Information Manager Flight Lieutenant Stephen Graham studies notes aboard a Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) P3 Orion maritime search aircraft as it flies over the southern Indian Ocean looking for debris from missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 April 12, 2014. — Reuters pic



  • A relative of a passenger aboard Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 gestures as he shouts at Malaysian representatives during a briefing at Lido Hotel in Beijing April 12, 2014. — Reuters pic



  • Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) Tactical Coordinator Brent Collier (centre) briefs the crew aboard a P3 Orion maritime search aircraft before take-off towards the southern Indian Ocean looking for debris from missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 at RAAF Base Pearce, near Perth April 12, 2014. — Reuters pic



  • Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) Captain Flight Lieutenant Timothy McAlevey sits in the cockpit of a RNZAF P3 Orion maritime search aircraft as it flies over the southern Indian Ocean looking for debris from missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 April 12, 2014. — Reuters pic



  • Naval Aircrewman 2nd Class Karl Shinn unloads a Sonobuoy from a rack onboard a P-8A Poseidon during a search mission to locate Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 in the Indian Ocean, April 12, 2014. — Reuters pic



  • Naval Aircrewman 2nd Class Karl Shinn looks out a window of a P-8A Poseidon while flying over the Indian Ocean during a search mission to locate Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, April 12, 2014. — Reuters pic



About two-thirds of the 239 passengers aboard the missing plane came from China.


Chinese relatives have for weeks complained bitterly about what they call Malaysia’s secretive and incompetent handling of the search for the plane, which vanished March 8.


It disappeared from radar on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing and is believed to have crashed far out in the Indian Ocean.


A multi-national search, however, has failed to find any evidence despite weeks of looking.


A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said today that his country urges Malaysia to “take seriously” the families’ grievances, while urging families to behave in a “rational way”.


Dozens of relatives staged a noisy protest last month at the embassy — apparently sanctioned by Chinese authorities, who cleared streets for their approach — decrying Malaysian authorities and the national airline as “murderers”. — AFP









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