Malaysian co-pilot was on first 777 flight without minder

Agence France-Presse

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Malaysia Airlines says co-pilot Farid Abdul Hamid passed the first 5 flights with a minder and does not see a problem with Farid flying a Boeing 777 for the first time without one

FIRST FLIGHT. The co-pilot on the missing Malaysian Airline jet was flying the Boeing 777 without a minder for the first time. File photo by Francis Silvan/AFP

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia – Malaysia Airlines revealed Monday, March 24 the co-pilot of its missing jet was flying the Boeing 777 for the first time without a so-called “check co-pilot” looking over his shoulder.

Co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid has come under intense scrutiny, along with Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, after Malaysian authorities said flight MH370’s disappearance was due to “deliberate” action in the cockpit.

However, nothing has yet emerged publicly to implicate the two men. (READ: Malaysia asks US for undersea surveillance gear in jet search) 

The flag carrier said Fariq, 27, had come through his initial outings in the 777 model with no issues under a standard arrangement in which a First Officer’s first 5 flights in a new model of plane are done under the watchful eye of a “check co-pilot”.

“The first 5 flights, the co-pilot normally flies with what we call the check co-pilot. He actually passed the first 5 flights. We do not see any problem with him,” the airlines’ chief executive Ahmad Jauhari Yahya told a daily press conference on the crisis.

Flight 370 disappeared off civilian radar about an hour into its journey from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing carrying 239 people, sparking an unprecedented international search across huge swathes of the Indian Ocean and South China Sea.

Ahmad Jauhari added that Zaharie, 53, was himself an experienced 777 examiner.

“You must realize that he (Fariq) is flying with an examiner. The captain is a 777 examiner,” he added, referring to Zaharie.

Aircraft and ships from several nations are zeroing in on suspected plane debris in the southern Indian Ocean, but have been prevented from recovering anything for confirmation due to the distances involved and rough weather.

Fariq, who joined Malaysia Airlines 7 years ago, was accused in an Australian television report of allowing two young South African women into the cockpit of a plane he piloted in 2011, breaching rules imposed after the 9/11 attacks in America.

Police also removed a flight simulator from Zaharie’s home and were examining it for any clues. – Rappler.com

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