Chinese plane crash ‘was caused intentionally by someone in the cockpit’, black box suggests

Chinese passenger jet was DELIBERATELY crashed into a mountain – killing all 132 on board – by either a pilot or someone who managed to access the cockpit, black box data suggests

Boeing 737-800 from Kunming to Guangzhou crashed in Guangxi mountainsA blackbox was found after the China Eastern jet crashed killing 132 peopleData from it claims to show someone in the cockpit intentionally crashed the jet 

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The Chinese passenger jet which smashed into a mountain this year killing all 132 people on board was deliberately crashed by the pilot or an intruder, investigators have said.

Flight data from the black box recovered from the China Eastern Boeing 737-800 shows human input forced the plane into a nosedive as it plummeted to the ground in the mountainous Guangxi area on March 21. 

Experts believe it shows that only murder-suicide could explain how the plane ended up with a near vertical trajectory after failing to find any technical faults.

‘The plane did what it was told to do by someone in the cockpit,’ a source told the Wall Street Journal.

While the pilot is a main suspect, investigators are not ruling out a crew member or passenger entering the flight deck and taking over the controls.  

The Chinese passenger jet which smashed into a mountain this year killing all 132 people on board was deliberately crashed, investigators believe

The plane, flight number MU5735 from Kunming to Guangzhou, got into trouble over the city of Wuzhou, before it plummeted 29,100ft into a mountainside

Workers search through debris at the China Eastern flight crash site in Tengxian County

China Eastern airlines and the US National Transportation Safety Board did not immediately respond to requests for comment

Flight data from a black box (one of those found) recovered from a Chinese plane crash earlier this year indicates someone in the cockpit intentionally crashed the jet, it’s been reported

Chinese authorities have not found any evidence of technical malfunction in the plane and the crew is now being investigated, a Western official told Reuters. 

While en route from Kunming to Guangzhou the Boeing 737-800 crashed killing 123 passengers and nine crew members in mainland China’s deadliest aviation disaster in 28 years. 

It also prompted China Eastern to ground all its 737-800 Boeing planes – raising fears about the aerospace company’s jets – which was reversed a month later. 

A report issued in April by the Civil Aviation Administration of China said no abnormalities had been found in the plane, its crew or external elements such as bad weather.

Investigators were then still attempting to extract data from the heavily damaged black box flight data and voice recorders. 

At the time of the crash, the crew made no report of problems before losing contact with air traffic control. 

The China Eastern Boeing 737-800 went into a sudden nosedive, appeared to briefly recover, and then slammed into the ground in the mountainous Guangxi area on March 21

The crash left a 65-foot-deep crater in a mountainside, shattered the plane and set off a fire in the surrounding forest

More than 49,000 pieces of plane debris were found. It took two days to find the cockpit voice recorder and six days for the flight data recorder, which was buried 5 feet underground

Boeing 737-800’s have had a series of deadly crashes in past:

2006: Gol Transportes Aéreos flight broke up and crashed in Brazil with all 154 on board dying2007: Kenya Airways flight crashed into a swamp on the way to Nairobi with all 108 passengers and six crew dying2009: Turkish Airlines flight from Istanbul crashes in a field near the Polderbaan while trying to land at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport with nine people dying2010: Ethiopian Airlines flight crashed into the Mediterranean Sea after taking off from Beirut, with all 90 passengers and eight crew dying2010: Air India Express flight overran the runway on landing at Mangalore International Airport, with 158 passengers and six crew dying and just eight survivors2016: Flydubai flight from Dubai to Rostov-on-Don in Russia crashed on the final approach, with all 62 people dying2018: Air Niugini flight from Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia, to Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, with a stop-off at Chuuk International Airport, undershot the runway and landed in a lagoon, with one person dying2020: Pegasus Airlines flight skidded off the runway at Istanbul Sabiha Gökçen Airport before splitting into three pieces of fuselage, leaving three dead2020: Air India Express flight overshot the runway while landing in heavy rain and crashed into a gorge at Calicut International Airport, with both pilots and 18 passengers dying2022: China Eastern Airlines flight crashed while en-route to Guangzhou, China
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Pictures show that the crash left a 65-foot-deep crater in a mountainside, shattered the plane and set off a fire in the surrounding forest.

More than 49,000 pieces of plane debris were found. It took two days to find the cockpit voice recorder and six days for the flight data recorder, which was buried 5 feet underground.

Pilots have taken aircrafts down before such as Germanwings Flight 9525 Andreas Lubitz, previously treated for depression and suicidal tendencies. 

He locked the captain out of the cockpit before crashing the plane kiling 150 people into a mountain near Prads-Haute-Bléone, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France. 

There was also a 2013 LAM Mozambique Airlines Flight 470 and an EgyptAir Flight 990 that led to the deaths of 33 and 217 people respectively. 

China Eastern, one of four major Chinese airlines, and its subsidiaries grounded all their Boeing 737-800s, more than 200 planes, following the crash but have since returned them to service.

The aircraft was delivered to China Eastern from Boeing in June 2015 and had been flying for over six years. 

The airline said the grounding was a precaution, not a sign of any problem with the planes, which are among the most relied upon by airlines worldwide. 

From mid-April it had resumed use of the 737-800 planes and Chinese regulators did not point to any technical recommendations on the 737-800, which has been in service since 1997 with a strong safety record, according to experts. 

Boeing – one of the biggest makers of aerospace technology – has been under fire recently over flight crashes involving 737-800. 

The company declined to comment and referred Reuters to the Chinese investigators while the US National Transportation Safety Board did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 

China Eastern said: ‘Any unofficial speculation may interfere with the accident investigation and affect the real progress of the global air transport industry.’

Reuters reported that shares of Boeing were up 5.1% in afternoon trade. 

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