Iranian People-Smuggling Link as CIA Says Terror Not Ruled Out in Missing Malaysia Jet

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Two suspect men who flew on a missing Malaysian airliner appear to have been Iranian illegal immigrants, officials said Tuesday, lessening fears of terrorism but doing little to unlock the agonizing riddle of what has befallen the plane's 239 passengers and crew.

On the fourth day of a multinational search at sea and on land, relatives desperate for news of loved ones aboard Malaysia Airlines MH370 said their hopes for a miracle were ebbing away.

Authorities have doubled the search radius to 100 nautical miles (equivalent to 185 kilometers) around the point where the Boeing 777 disappeared from radar over the South China Sea early Saturday, en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

"We are intensifying our search and rescue, and hoping against hope there is still an opportunity for us to rescue (those on board)," Malaysian Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein told reporters.

The 34-year-old son of Malaysian security guard Subramaniam Gurusamy was on the flight to do business in Beijing for an oil company.

"My three-year-old grandson is asking: 'where is Dad?' We tell him father has gone to buy sweets for you," Gurusamy, 60, said as he broke down in tears.

"Please bring back my son. I am praying for divine intervention. That is the only hope we have."

Malaysia had opened a terror probe, joined by FBI agents from the United States. But the revelation of the identities of two men who boarded the flight using stolen European passports suggested they were young Iranian migrants seeking a new life overseas.

Interpol named the pair as Pouri Nour Mohammadi, 18, who was booked to fly on to Germany, and Delavar Seyed Mohammad Reza, 29, who was ticketed through to Denmark.

Reza's ultimate destination was Sweden, where he intended to apply for political asylum, according to Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet.

The two traveled to Kuala Lumpur from Doha on their real Iranian passports, and their identification was helped by relatives in Europe who reported them missing, officials said.

"It is part of a human-smuggling issue and not a part of a terrorist issue," Interpol chief Ronald Noble told reporters in France, adding that the international agency was more and more "certain that these individuals are probably not terrorists."

Iran offered its assistance to the Malaysian investigation, pledging to provide "any information on the Iranians and their status as soon as it is available." -

Police in Southeast Asia agreed that people-smuggling was emerging as the likeliest explanation for the identity fraud.

The two passports -- one Italian and one Austrian -- were stolen over the past two years in Thailand, where police have long been battling a thriving trade in Western documents used by criminal gangs.

"We believe that these two passports were stolen by a human-smuggling gang who send people to work in third countries, especially European countries," Lieutenant General Panya Maman, commander of Thailand's southern police region, told Agence France Presse.

Malaysia's national police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said his officers were not ruling anything out but were now focusing on theories including a hijacking, sabotage or psychological problems among passengers or crew.

Elsewhere on the judicial front, French prosecutors on Tuesday opened an investigation for manslaughter following the plane's mystery disappearance.

The move does not indicate any evidence of foul play necessarily, but is standard practice since four of the missing passengers are French nationals, and allows French magistrates to take a more active part in the investigation.

Flight MH370, captained by a veteran pilot, had relayed no indications of distress, and weather at the time was said to be good.

The vastness of the search zone reflects authorities' bafflement over the plane's disappearance. The operation has grown to involve 42 ships and 35 aircraft from Southeast Asian countries, Australia, China, New Zealand and the United States.

The plane's last confirmed radar sighting was off Vietnam's southern coast. "In terms of our assessments and predictions - we have little hope of a positive outcome," Pham Quy Tieu, Vietnamese deputy minister of transport, said.

The search sphere now includes land on the Malaysian peninsula itself, the waters off its west coast, and an area to the north of the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

That covers an area far removed from the scheduled route of flight MH370, which officials say may have inexplicably turned back towards Kuala Lumpur.

China, which had 153 of its nationals on board the plane, said it would harness 10 satellites equipped with high-resolution imaging to help in the search. Boeing said it was joining a U.S. government team to try to unravel the mystery of what happened to its 777-200 plane.

Conflicting information has deepened the anguish of relatives, with tests on oil slicks in the South China Sea showing they were not from the missing jet and reports of possible debris from the flight also proving to be false alarms.

At a hotel in Beijing where relatives are gathered, a man in his 20s surnamed Su said: "I hope it is a hijacking, then there will be some hope that my young cousin has survived.

"My uncle and aunt had an emotional breakdown, they are not eating, drinking and sleeping."

A total of 17 Chinese relatives have so far taken up an offer from Malaysia Airlines to fly to Kuala Lumpur to be closer to the operation, and more are expected in the coming days, the airline said.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang reiterated demands for Malaysia to look after the relatives "and give them accurate information in a timely fashion."

Malaysia Airlines stressed: "We are as anxious as the families to know the status of their loved ones."

Meanwhile, yhe head of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency said Tuesday that terrorism could not be ruled out in the disappearance of the Malaysian airliner, describing the plane's fate as a "mystery."

CIA Director John Brennan said there had been reports of claims of responsibility for downing the missing jet, but stressed that these were far from confirmed.

"I think there's a lot of speculation right now -- some claims of responsibility that have not been, you know, confirmed or corroborated at all," he said.

"We are looking at it very carefully."

Brennan provided no further details, but his comment was the first reference by a U.S. official to any alleged claim of responsibility over the jet's fate.

When asked if he could rule out a terrorist link, Brennan said: "No, I wouldn't rule it out."

The former counter-terrorism adviser to President Barack Obama stressed that it was too early to draw any conclusions about the Malaysia Airlines plane that vanished Saturday.

"Clearly this is still a mystery," he said.

There were a host of unanswered questions including why the plane's transponder stopped emitting signals and what was the role of passengers carrying stolen passports, he said.

"There are a number of very curious anomalies about all of this...You know, did it turn around? You know, were the individuals with these stolen passports in any way involved?"

He added: "What about the transponder? Why did it sort of, you know, just disappear from the radar?"

He admitted that it was easy to speculate, but warned: "I think at this point we just have to, again, be patient and wait and let the authorities continue to investigate."

Asked about speculation that the pilot may have sought to commit suicide, Brennan said: "I think you cannot discount any theory."

Brennan's comments came at a rare public speaking appearance at an event in Washington organized by the Council on Foreign Relations, a think tank.

Comments 12
Thumb .mowaten. 11 March 2014, 21:08

pfff.. all that drama because their was a pair of iranians on board.. cut the speculation and paranoia guys, it's becoming ridiculous

Thumb LEBhasNOhope 11 March 2014, 22:01

you guys like to complain and play victim even when not accused. beyond absurd.

"It is part of a human-smuggling issue and not a part of a terrorist issue,"

Missing VINCENT 11 March 2014, 23:55

Ridiculous indeed if you can't see beyond what your Iranian masters' self imposed limitation towards the view of the world. The "fricking" entire plane disappeared and, for sure, no survivors will emerge. Heck yeh, I would investigate any and all links to any Iranian specially boarding a plane illegally.

Thumb popeye 12 March 2014, 08:27

He would not have commented on the article had it not been for the fact these suspects are iranian and share the same nationality and ideology as he does.

Default-user-icon sempre (Guest) 12 March 2014, 12:51

Piss off popeye, nothing but personal attacks from you, nothing! Obviously a shill.

Default-user-icon sempre (Guest) 12 March 2014, 12:52

Popeye only engages in smear campaigns and personal attacks, the value he adds to any article is negative, i.e. counterproductive and tasteless. Not even gonna address him.

Thumb fx.990 11 March 2014, 21:43

people using stolen passports is common, have a read:

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/03/09/stolen-passports-malaysia-flight/6230767/

The malay government says that terrorism is unlikely, that people board planes with stolen passports all the time, but ignore all that--these guys are Iranian, therefore muslim, probably extremist, probably terrorist. that's the only reason the CIA says terrorism isn't ruled out. it's not like the dichotomy here, at least by some people, that iran=bad others=good.

Besides, Iran doesn't have any incentive to blow up a plane having two hundred something chinese people in it. like the malay government says: nah.

Thumb fx.990 11 March 2014, 22:00

well ok, we'll have to wait and see.

Thumb fx.990 11 March 2014, 23:23

lol, ok bro just relax. what will you do when they are just regular people like the article stipulates? bet you didn't even read it. Anyway, g'night and get that anger/aggression under control, it ain't good for your health nor the conversation/debate.

Thumb kanaanljdid 11 March 2014, 21:43

Flamethrower, where are you ? I am worried about since we have no news from you since this plane crash!

Missing marhaba 11 March 2014, 21:49

Definitely Hizballah's fault. Very obvious from the clues.

Thumb cedre 12 March 2014, 00:21

imho, they dont look like terrorists, millions of unemployed people in superpower Iran struggling. Khamenei should spent money on his citizens instead of financing HizbIran and Assad...