Dark5 | 5 Mysterious Aircraft Lost While Carrying Unexplained Cargo @dark5tv | Uploaded 2 months ago | Updated 1 day ago
On March 8, 2014, Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 took off from Kuala Lumpur with 239 souls aboard, destined for Beijing. But the flight never arrived. Among the scattered wreckage and unanswered questions, a particular mystery stands out: an unlisted, mysterious cargo added to the official manifest only after the airliner took off. Did the cargo of Flight MH370 play a role in its disappearance?
The Boeing 777's last communication came 38 minutes after takeoff, followed by an unexplained westward turn. An hour later, MH370 vanished from radar over the Indian Ocean.
Despite extensive searches, the fate of the flight and its passengers remains a mystery.
Relatives of the passengers have long insisted that the flight carried 2.2 tons of unaccounted cargo, absent from the initial manifests released by Malaysia Airlines. Records indicate that over two tons of "radio accessories and chargers" were on board but never officially documented.
Could one of these undisclosed devices have malfunctioned, caught fire, or interfered with the aircraft's systems?
Another theory points to a hazardous combination of batteries and fruit. According to the manifest, Flight MH370 transported 221kg of lithium batteries—known for their flammability—and five tons of mangosteens, a tropical fruit.
Some experts speculated that juice from the fruit might have leaked, reacting chemically with the batteries and igniting a catastrophic fire. While failing to explain the plane's course change, this scenario could account for the loss of communication and subsequent disappearance.
A later report clarified that the batteries and fruit were securely stored apart, making the possibility of such a chemical reaction highly unlikely.
Among the most intriguing aspects of MH370's cargo is a mysterious 89kg load listed on the manifest only after the plane was airborne. This anomaly, uncovered by a French investigation in 2019—long after other nations had ceased their inquiries—remains unresolved...
On March 8, 2014, Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 took off from Kuala Lumpur with 239 souls aboard, destined for Beijing. But the flight never arrived. Among the scattered wreckage and unanswered questions, a particular mystery stands out: an unlisted, mysterious cargo added to the official manifest only after the airliner took off. Did the cargo of Flight MH370 play a role in its disappearance?
The Boeing 777's last communication came 38 minutes after takeoff, followed by an unexplained westward turn. An hour later, MH370 vanished from radar over the Indian Ocean.
Despite extensive searches, the fate of the flight and its passengers remains a mystery.
Relatives of the passengers have long insisted that the flight carried 2.2 tons of unaccounted cargo, absent from the initial manifests released by Malaysia Airlines. Records indicate that over two tons of "radio accessories and chargers" were on board but never officially documented.
Could one of these undisclosed devices have malfunctioned, caught fire, or interfered with the aircraft's systems?
Another theory points to a hazardous combination of batteries and fruit. According to the manifest, Flight MH370 transported 221kg of lithium batteries—known for their flammability—and five tons of mangosteens, a tropical fruit.
Some experts speculated that juice from the fruit might have leaked, reacting chemically with the batteries and igniting a catastrophic fire. While failing to explain the plane's course change, this scenario could account for the loss of communication and subsequent disappearance.
A later report clarified that the batteries and fruit were securely stored apart, making the possibility of such a chemical reaction highly unlikely.
Among the most intriguing aspects of MH370's cargo is a mysterious 89kg load listed on the manifest only after the plane was airborne. This anomaly, uncovered by a French investigation in 2019—long after other nations had ceased their inquiries—remains unresolved...