Sunday, March 16, 2014

የኢትዮጵያው ወረቃማ ተጫዋች ሰላዲን ሰይድ የግብፁን ክለብ ዋሊድ ዳግላን እድል ወደ ሶስተኛ ደረጃ አስጠጋው

የኢትዮጵያው ወረቃማ ተጫዋች ሰላዲን ሰይድ የግብፁን ክለብ ዋሊድ ዳግላን እድል ወደ ሶስተኛ ደረጃ አስጠጋው
Ethiopian striker Salhadin Said hit a brace to lift Wadi Degla past new comers Minya 3-1 in the Egyptian Premier League on Sunday.

The 25-year international striker opened the scoring in the 28th minute before Mohab Said doubled the lead three minutes past the hour mark.

Ayman Hassanein pulled one back for Minya in the 78th minute, but Said killed any hopes of a comeback with a late goal deep in injury time.

Wadi Degla are now third in Group B with 18 points after 11 games and they still have a game in hand.

In Group A, Arab Contractors conceded another disappointed away draw against debutant Ragaa 2-2.

The Marsa Matrouh-based side grabbed the lead through Eslam Fouad after 18 minutes, but Arab Contractors responded with two quick goals from Mahmoud Ezzat, 44, and Ali Fathi, 50, to overturn their deficit.

However, Tamer Moheb gave them a huge blow after hitting the equaliser just a few seconds before the final whistle.

Arab Contractors – who had an amazing season start – have been struggling lately as they have only won once in their previous six games.

They are now third in their group with 21 points after 12 matches.

የማሌዥያ አዬር መንገድ በረራ MH 370 አብራሪዎች የተቃዋሚ ፖለቲካ ፓርቲ ሊቀመንበር ደጋፊዎች ነበሩ ተባለ::

የማሌዥያ አዬር መንገድ በረራ MH 370  አብራሪዎች የተቃዋሚ ፖለቲካ ፓርቲ ሊቀመንበር ደጋፊዎች ነበሩ ተባለ::ያም አቋማቸው አውሮፕላኑን ጠላፊው እነሱ እራሳቸው ናቸው የሚል ወሬ እየተናፈስ ሲሆን የማሌዥያ መንግስት የክስ ሰነድ አስገብቷል። ዋናው አብራሪ ዛሃሪ አህመድ በአሁኑ ወቅት በግብረ ሰዶም ወንጀል ተከሶ እስርቤት ለሚገኘው  አንዋር ኢብራሂም ደጋፊ ነበር የሚል ወሬም እየተሰማ ነው። በአውሮፕላን ሙያ ጠበብት ነን እንደሚሉት አንዳንድ የአውሮፕላኑ የመገናኛ መስመሮች ሆን ተብሎ የተሰናከሉ ሲሆን እነሱ እንደሚሉት አንድ ሰው ሆን ብሎ ካላጣፋቸው በስትቀር ሰጥ እረጭ እንደማይሉ ይጠቁማሉ። እነዚህ የመገናኛ መስመሮችን ለማጥፋት እውቀቱ እና ቁልፉ  ካላቸውአብራሪዎች በሰተቀር ሌላ ሰው ማጥፋት አይችልም ይላሉ። እነሱ አንደዘገቡት አውሮፕላኑ ከንግድ ሳተላይት ጋር መገናኘቱን ካቆም በሗላ ከመከላከያ ራዳሩ ጋር ግንኙነት እንደነበረውና አውሮፕላኑ እየራቀ ሲሄድ ግን  ራዳሩ መሳብ እንዳልቻለ ይናገራሉ::

Malaysia Airlines captain supports opposition leader, but police suspect no wrongdoing from either pilot after searching homes

Zaharie Ahmad Shah is said to have been a devout supporter of Malaysia’s opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim. But after searching the homes of Shah and co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid, authorities say they have no reason to suspect the pilots of flight MH370 did anything wrong.

Their careers were flying high — until they inexplicably disappeared into a cloud of mystery.

The pilots of the missing Malaysia Airlines jet were by most accounts respected, community-minded men. But since Malaysian officials said the plane was hijacked by someone with flying experience, a fresh coat of suspicion covers the pilot and first officer.

Police were scouring their homes around the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur on Saturday, more than a week after the plane vanished. Despite the searches of the their homes, authorities say they have no reason to suspect the pilots did anything wrong.
A police car comes out of a main gate of the missing Malaysia Airlines pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah's house in Shah Alam, outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
AP
A police car comes out of a main gate of the missing Malaysia Airlines pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah's house in Shah Alam, outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, adored aviation, judging by his posts to message boards and social media. He joined Malaysia Airlines in 1981 and had more than 18,000 hours of flying experience.


The bald captain and grandfather was so confident in his skills in a range of areas that he posted a series of instructional YouTube videos he called “a community service.” In the videos he demonstrated how to make air conditioners more efficient, how to waterproof window panes and how to repair a refrigerator icemaker.
Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah is said to have been a devout supporter of Malaysia’s main opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim. Pray For MH370 via Facebook
Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah is said to have been a devout supporter of Malaysia’s main opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim.

Shah is also said to have been a devout supporter of Malaysia’s main opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim.

Ibrahim was sentenced March 7 to five years in prison on a sodomy charge — a development that many Malaysians regard as political payback.

Before the doomed flight, Shah had even reportedly told friends he was planning on attending the People’s Justice Party leader’s high-profile trial.
Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim was sentenced to five years in prison on a sodomy charge — a development that many Malaysians regard as political payback.
Lai Seng Sin/AP
Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim was sentenced to five years in prison on a sodomy charge — a development that many Malaysians regard as political payback.


Shah was “very nice, very friendly and safety-conscious,” said one flight attendant, who didn’t want to be named because of company policy prohibiting employees from speaking to the media.

His Facebook page reveals he was a flying fanatic.
Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah sits in front of his home flight simulator and explains how to tune up your air-conditioning system in a video he posted on YouTube on Jan. 10, 2013.
Zaharie Shah via YouTube
Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah sits in front of his home flight simulator and explains how to tune up your air-conditioning system in a video he posted on YouTube on Jan. 10, 2013.

When not in a real airplane he flew remote-controlled ones. His collection included a lightweight, twin-engine helicopter and an amphibious aircraft. He also worked as a flight instructor, according to reports.

And in an online forum for flight simulator enthusiasts, Shah bragged about an elaborate flight simulator he built in his home in Shah Alam, outside Kuala Lumpur, that ran two complex Microsoft computer games. The setup featured three touchscreens and an imitation center console of a cockpit.


“Time to take to the next level of simulation,” he wrote. “Looking for buddies to share this passion.”

The CEO of Malaysia Airlines said Friday he saw no problem with Shah’s obsession, saying “everyone is free to do his own hobby.”

By comparison, co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27, was a relative novice.
Journalists wait outside the house of Fariq Abdul Hamid, co-pilot of the Malaysia Airlines missing flight, in Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia.
AHMAD YUSNI/EPA
Journalists wait outside the house of Fariq Abdul Hamid, co-pilot of the Malaysia Airlines missing flight, in Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/police-search-homes-malaysia-airlines-pilots-suspect-wrongdoing-article-1.1723044#ixzz2w70mOJHS

አቃፊና ታቃፊ::

አቃፊና ታቃፊ::
ማን አቃፊ?
ማን ታቃፊ?

Saturday, March 15, 2014

ማስታዎቂያ መሳቅና መዝናናት ለምትፈልጉ ብቻ ቀኑ ነገ ቦታው ሳን ድያጎ የሳቅ ዶክተሮች (ባለሙያዎች) ፩ኛ ባትሪ ፪ኛ ልጅ ያሬድ ፫ኛ ዶክሌ

ማስታዎቂያ መሳቅና መዝናናት ለምትፈልጉ ብቻ
መሳቅ ለረሳችሁ፣ ፈገግታ ለራቃችሁ፣ ኑሮ ላጣደፋችሁ ፣ አረፍት ላምራችሁ፣ ኑ ተዝናኑ። ሳቅ መድሃኒት መሆኑን አይርሱ
ቀኑ ነገ (May 16, 2014)
ቦታው ሳን ድያጎ (San Diego CA)
የሳቅ ዶክተሮች (ባለሙያዎች)
፩ኛ ባትሪ ተመስገን
፪ኛ ልጅ ያሬድ
፫ኛ ዶክሌ ወንዶሰን

It is like comparing Apple Vs. Orange when you compare Ethiopian Airlines ET 702 Vs. Malaysian Airlines Flight MH 370

Some reporters, analysts or experts are tying to compare the disappearance of Malaysian Airlines  Flight MH 370 with Ethiopian Airlines
ET 702.  In my opinion it will be like comparing  apple and orange. Here is why.

As you know both apple and orange have one similarity, i.e.  both have a shape that look like a ball .  But they have several differences,  like texture, test, color, density, hardness, softness,  their outer cover, seed size, the way they grow and several astronomical differences. The same for  MH 340 and ET702. First of, all we hear about  flight MH 370 is just speculations. So far no one knows what happened to flight MH 370. Let us say what the PM of Malaysia said is genuine  and true. and let us say that flight is hijacked,  still it has nothing to do with  Ethiopian Airlines flight ET702.

I am not sure if  this could be a lack of idiom or  terminology using the word "hijack/ hijacker"  for every flight which encounters an indecent . For example, In flight ET702 the co-pilot was doing every thing he could to get all the assistance to land the plane safely  despite the Swiss Air Force was  off duty and unable to grant his request for landing 3 long hours. In one point even he warned his is running out of fuel.   For any flight 3 hrs is very long. For example it takes less than 5 hrs to cross from West to East coast of America. That shows ET702 had  non stop communication with traffic controller and other entities.   One the other hand,  Flight MH 370 disappears with out trace for more than a week (still not found). The other thing when flight ET 702 was landed at Geneva airport all passengers were  very fine even some of the passengers were not aware the incident . On the other hand,  nobody has any clear idea if the passengers in MH 370 are  alive or suffering from this ordeal . We can not estimate in what trauma they are/ will be suffering from this tragidy for the rest of their life.     

Let us see the families, friends, the  entire Malaysian nation and the entire world how much we are  worrying and praying the safe discovery of MH 370. At this time several nations in the world are deploying their resources to locate MH 370.  On the other hand the ET 702 incidence was just a  few hrs news which had a happy ending. Even I am not sure the entire world was aware of about ET 702 incidence  including families and friends of the passengers until the news broke for the entire world after the whole deal was over.

So, based on the type and magnitude  of the two incidences it will be unfair and unwise to compare the two flights. I pray for the safe  return of MH370.  When that happen,  at least we can have one more common happy ending MH 370 with ET 702. Until that  time comes I believe MH 370 does not have any comparison with ET 702.

 

የማሌዥያው ጠቅላይ ሚኒስቴር አውሮፕላኑ ሆነ ተብሎ የተጠለፈ ነው አሉ

የማሌዥያው ጠቅላይ ሚኒስቴር አውሮፕላኑ ሆነ ብሎ የተጠለፈ ነው አሉ 
Official: Malaysian investigators conclude missing airliner hijacked


KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- Malaysia's prime minister says the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 appears to be "deliberate."

Speaking to the press early Saturday, Prime Minister Najib Razak said the investigation has refocused onto the crew and passengers aboard the missing plane. He added that despite growing evidence to suggest a possible hijacking or sabotage, all possibilities are still being investigated.

The prime minister also said that authorities are now trying to trace the plane across two possible "corridors" -- a northern corridor from northern Thailand through to the border of Kazakstan and Turkmenistan, and a southern corridor from Indonesia to the southern Indian Ocean -- and that search efforts in the South China Sea would be ended.

"Clearly the search for MH370 has entered a new phase," he said.

Earlier, a Malaysian government official who is involved in the investigation said investigators have concluded that one of the pilots or someone else with flying experience hijacked the missing Malaysia Airlines jet.

The official said no motive has been established, and it is not yet clear where the plane was taken. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media.

The official said that hijacking was no longer a theory. "It is conclusive."

The Boeing 777's communication with the ground was severed under one hour into a flight March 8 from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 aboard. Malaysian officials have said radar data suggest it may have turned back and crossed back over the Malaysian peninsula westward, after setting out toward the Chinese capital.
Piracy and pilot suicide have been among the scenarios under study as investigators grew increasingly certain the missing Malaysia Airlines jet reversed course and headed west after its last radio contact with air traffic controllers.

The latest evidence suggests the plane didn't experience a catastrophic incident over the South China Sea as was initially suspected. Some experts had theorized that one of the pilots, or someone else with flying experience, hijacked the plane or committed suicide by plunging the jet into the sea.
A U.S. official said Friday in Washington that investigators were examining the possibility of "human intervention" in the plane's disappearance, adding it may have been "an act of piracy." The official, who wasn't authorized to talk to the media and spoke on condition of anonymity, said it also was possible the plane may have landed somewhere.

Play Video
Who were the pilots of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370?
The official said key evidence suggesting human intervention was that contact with the Boeing 777's transponder stopped about a dozen minutes before a messaging system on the jet quit. Such a gap would be unlikely in the case of an in-flight catastrophe.

A Malaysian official, who also declined to be identified because he is not authorized to brief the media, said only a skilled aviator could navigate the plane the way it was flown after its last confirmed location over the South China Sea. The official said it had been established with a "more than 50 percent" degree of certainty that military radar had picked up the missing plane after it dropped off civilian radar.

Earlier Malaysia's acting transport minister, Hishammuddin Hussein, had said investigators were still trying to establish with certainty that military radar records of a blip moving west across the Malay Peninsula into the Strait of Malacca showed Flight MH370.

"I will be the most happiest person if we can actually confirm that it is the MH370, then we can move all (search) assets from the South China Sea to the Strait of Malacca," he told reporters. Until then, he said, the international search effort would continue expanding east and west from the plane's last confirmed location.

Two communication systems on Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 were shut down separately in the moments before the flight disappeared from radar on Saturday; a data system and two transponders which relayed information about the jet's speed, altitude and location, CBS News' Bob Orr reported.

Play Video
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappearance may be criminal act

While a cascading electrical problem could feasibly cause that kind of staged electrical failure, Orr said it's also entirely possible somebody on the plane intentionally turned off the systems. And investigators say there's further evidence suggesting the jet did not crash immediately after being lost on radar; a transmitter on the plane tried for another four hours to ping satellites. That's an indication to analysts that the jet continued to fly for some time -- possibly as far as 2,500 miles from where it was last detected.

Sources say it is also possible that the plane may have spend some of that time on the ground with its engines still running.

Officials have told CBS News the plane had enough fuel to carry it out to the west into the Indian Ocean, so the search is growing even larger. While they believe it likely crashed in water, it is also possible landed somewhere.



Sources told the Reuters news agency on Friday, meanwhile, that the path Flight 370 appears to have taken after diverting from its intended route strongly suggests that a trained pilot was still in control of the aircraft.

The news agency said investigators believe the missing jet appeared to follow a known air navigational route, based on the radar blips seen by the Malaysian military.
That would have taken the plane into the Andaman Sea and toward the Indian Ocean, and according to Reuters, "could only have been set deliberately, either by flying the Boeing 777-200ER jet manually or by programming the auto-pilot."

Reuters cited another source as saying the official investigation was increasingly focused on the possibility that someone with training as a pilot deliberately diverted the flight.

"What we can say is we are looking at sabotage, with hijack still on the cards," a senior Malaysian police official told Reuters.

The New York Times, quoting American officials and others familiar with the investigation, reported on Friday that the flight altered its course more than once after it lost contact with ground control and that it made significant changes in altitude. The Times said radar signals appear to show the airplane climbing to 45,000 feet and making a sharp turn to the west. That altitude is above the approved limit for a Boeing 777-200.

Then, the Times reported, the plane descended unevenly to an altitude of 23,000 feet, below normal cruising levels, as it approached the island of Penang, where it climbed again and flew northwest toward the Indian Ocean.

Boeing offers a satellite service that can receive a stream of data on how an aircraft is functioning in flight and relay the information to the plane's home base. Malaysia Airlines didn't subscribe to that service, but the plane still had the capability to connect with the satellite and was automatically sending signals, or pings, said the U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to discuss the situation by name.

The signal, called a "handshake" does not transmit data, but just tells the satellite that the plane is still in the sky. Once an hour for four or five hours, the plane communicated with a satellite, according to a U.S. official speaking on background. Then the communication stopped - the plane either crashed on land or in the water, or it landed somewhere and turned off the engines.

The communications back and forth do not give a specific location for the plane. But they indicate the direction the satellite would have to tilt its antenna to find the plane though not where on that arc the plane would be.
20 Photos
Search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370
Scores of aircraft and ships from 12 countries are involved in the search, which reaches into the eastern stretches of the South China Sea and on the western side of the Malay Peninsula, northwest into the Andaman Sea and the Indian Ocean.

CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reports that the USS Kidd has been assigned a search area in the Andaman Sea both east and west of the Andaman Islands. The P-8, which was scheduled to fly its first mission Friday tonight, will cover a grid that stretches west to the southern part of the Bay of Bengal.

India said it was using heat sensors on flights over hundreds of Andaman Sea islands Friday and would expand the search for the missing jet farther west into the Bay of Bengal, about 1,000 miles to the west of the plane's last known position.

A team of five U.S. officials with air traffic control and radar expertise - three from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board and two from the Federal Aviation Administration - has been in Kuala Lumpur since Monday to assist with the investigation.

Friday, March 14, 2014

ብለው ብለው የማሌዥዋውን አውሮፕላን ከኢትዮጵያ አየር መንገድ ጋር ማመሳስል ጀመሩ

ብለው ብለው የማሌዥዋውን አውሮፕላን ከኢትዮጵያ አየር መንገድ ጋር ማምሳስል ጀመሩ

" ቆቅ ወዲህ ምዝግዝግ ወዲያ"

ይሉታል ይህን ነው! ወይስ "የጨነቀው እርጉዝ ያገባል"


How the Missing Malaysia Airlines Jet Could Have Been Hijacked

In the hours after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 vanished, the notion that hijackers were responsible seemed far-fetched. Since the 9/11 attacks, commercial pilots have been trained to prevent the weaponization of their planes by never unlocking their cockpit doors for hijackers–even if the lives of passengers are being threatened. Even if the MH370 captain or first officer broke with official policy and opened the door, why wouldn’t one of them first use the jet’s transponder to squawk “7500,” the universal code for a hijacking in progress?

Another possibility was that a crew member was the culprit, much like the Ethiopian Airlines pilot who recently diverted his Boeing 767 to Geneva in search of political asylum. But assuming the motive in such a caper would be escape to a foreign land, the pilot-turned-hijacker would have no clear reason to shut down the plane’s communications systems; doing so would vastly complicate his journey. Early on, then, the smart money was on the disappearance being the result of a catastrophic mechanical failure had caused the plane to plummet from the sky, and that it was only a matter of time before bits of wreckage started to wash ashore.

In recent days, however, several telling snippets of information have emerged that make a hijacking harder to rule out. As the Wall Street Journal first reported, the Boeing 777-200ER’s Rolls-Royce engines appear to have kept transmitting maintenance data for five hours after the jet’s transponder went dead. Reuters later added that military radar had tracked the flight as it seemed to head for the Andaman Islands. Most intriguingly, there are indications the plane’s transponder and data-reporting system were switched off at different times, which, if true, provide solid evidence that a human hand was involved in silencing the aircraft.

With the hijacking theory growing more plausible by the hour, it’s time to wonder how such an epic crime might have occurred–and how it might have ended far more tragically than its perpetrator envisioned.

If MH370 was seized by passengers or a crew member, the hijacking would the third so far this year—in addition to the Ethiopian Airlines episode, there also was the bizarre Pegasus Airlines incident of early February, in which an apparently intoxicated Ukrainian man demanded passage to Sochi but was instead taken to Istanbul. This clustering of hijackings shouldn’t be surprising. The crime always has been highly viral in nature; each hijacking tends to be influenced by the last, in terms of modus operandi or other key details. A perfect example of this phenomenon is how “parajacking”–hijackings in which the criminal flees by jumping out of the plane–evolved in the early 1970s. Though most folks only remember the infamous D.B. Cooper hijacking of November 1971, there were numerous other incidents in the ensuing months in which the hijackers became increasingly more adept at getting away from the authorities–at least for a few days. (Cooper himself may have been a copycat, inspired by a farcical Air Canada hijacking.) Perhaps one of MH370’s pilots had been inspired by the Ethiopian Airlines hijacking, and thought he could fly his way to a better life on distant shores.

It also is important to remember that, unlike the highly organized 9/11 terrorists, most hijackers through history have been scatterbrained, sometimes to a comic degree. In the midst of manic episodes or afflicted by paranoia, they often can be quite good at planning minor details of their crimes, yet quite deluded about how the endgames will play out. This certainly was the case with Roger Holder, the principal hijacker of Western Airlines Flight 701 in June 1972. An Army veteran who had served four tours in Vietnam, Holder cooked up a clever ruse by which he convinced the crew that he was accompanied by four members of the Weathermen, at least one of whom was armed with a bomb. But he also hijacked a short-range Boeing 727 by accident, thereby making it impossible for him to reach his intended destination of Hanoi.

If MH370’s hijacker was in a mental state similar to Holder’s, he or she might have had the psychological wherewithal to figure out how to disable the plane’s communications systems, but not to realize that reaching, say, Western Europe was not a feasible goal. The hijacking could even have been an impulsive act, as many such crimes were during America’s “golden age” or air piracy. Ricardo Chavez Ortiz, for example, who commandeered a Frontier Airlines jet in order to get a radio crew to broadcast his rambling 34-minute speech, claimed to have decided to hijack the plane only after it reached cruising altitude.

Though data points may be accumulating in favor of the hijacking theory, it remains difficult to believe that MH370 is now in the possession of a global terror network that plans to use it in a future attack; landing and hiding a Boeing 777-200ER–a 209-foot-long aircraft with a 200-foot wingspan–in a lawless corner of the world would require immense resources, not to mention luck. In fact, there’s a good chance that any hijacker of the flight was not motivated by any sort of radical ideology, but rather by personal woes. In the history of air piracy, the vast majority of hijackers have been men or women who, though they may have claimed political affiliations, were most interested in fleeing from desperate circumstances: economic hardships, legal entanglements, love affairs gone wrong. In the era before everyone had to pass through metal detectors and have their carry-on luggage screened, hijacking a plane was an easy and spectacular way to try and alter one’s fortunes. One young American hijacker, who tried to flee to Cuba with her boyfriend in the late 1960s, neatly summed up that mindset when later asked why she had opted for such a risky crime: “Something had to be done–and I did something, for better or worse. It [was] better than eighteen years of therapy, or whatever. It just seemed like the answer.”

On one level, it’s comforting to think that a hijacker of MH370 was not bent on using the plane as a weapon of mass destruction, but rather wanted to start life anew somewhere else. But it’s also frightening to imagine a world where, as in the early 1970s, the desperate and deluded increasingly start to view hijacking as a reasonable solution to their problems.