
SEPANG, March 8 -- Malaysia Airlines Group CEO Ahmad Jauhari Yahya today dismissed speculation that a Beijing-bound Malaysia Airlines flight that went missing had landed in Nanming, China.
He told a news conference that Flight MH370 lost contact with the Subang Air Traffic Control at 2.40 am Saturday, about two hours after taking off from the KL international airport here.
Ahmad Jauhari said Malaysian and Vietnamese search-and-rescue teams had activated their operations in the South China Sea along the border of the Malaysian and Vietnamese airspaces where the contact with the flight was lost.
"They mounted the search-and-rescue operation a few hours ago. And they are still working on it. We have to wait for the result.
"So far, we have not received any confirmation that any plane landed in Nanming, China. We lost contact at about 2.40 am, that's the radar contact.
"The last position reported was about 120 nautical miles east of Kota Baharu, in the South China Sea. There was no indication of a distress signal from the aircraft," he said.

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