MH370 crash evokes pilot suicide thesis: The investigation into the crash of the Boeing 777 of Malaysia Airlines, which caused the death of the 239 passengers on March 8, 2014, seems to advance. According to information from the Parisian, investigators are studying the theory of the suicide of the pilot of the aircraft after going to the headquarters of Boeing in Seattle last May. "Some abnormal turns made by the 777 can only be done manually, so someone was in charge," said a source close to the Parisian investigation. "The 53-year-old pilot, Zaharie Ahmad Shah, was experienced with more than 18,000 hours of flight to his meter.

According to the information obtained by the French investigators in the United States, the 777 of Malaysia Airlines would have been flown to the end. But "the judges have told us that there is nothing to say that the driver is involved," said Me Marie Dosé, the lawyer of Ghyslain Wattrelos, a French engineer who lost in the crash his wife and two of his three children .

Moreover, the investigators are also looking at another track: "it is too early to say it categorically, but nothing is credited that someone else could have entered the cockpit ...", said an investigator to the Parisian.

MH370 crash evokes pilot suicide thesis

Other tracks have, however, been dismissed or seem implausible: the track of an action against engineers of the American company Freescale, present aboard the 777 of the Malaysia Airlines, the track of a terrorist attack committed by Uyghur or Tamil groups or the track of sabotage carried out by a Malaysian aeronautical engineer sitting near the satellite system of the aircraft.

Judicially, France is the only country to continue to investigate this accident. In July 2018, Malaysia's international investigation team stated in its final report that the investigation failed to establish the cause of the crash's origin. The wreck of the 777 Malaysia Airlines, which connected Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia) to Beijing (China), was never found in the Indian Ocean.