Missing Malaysia Flight 370 update: Police have cleared everyone on flight except the pilot

Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah Facebook

After a lengthy investigation, including more than 170 interviews, Malaysian police have cleared all of Flight MH370's occupants of wrongdoing, except for the pilot.

Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah remains a suspect in the disappearance of the plane, which vanished on March 8 while traveling from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 persons on board.

Police told London's Sunday Times that Shah had a flight simulator at home that was programmed with practice flights to a remote island in the south Indian Ocean. He also allegedly practiced landing on a shortened runway, and flying long distances across the Ocean. The programs were deleted, but authorities were able to recover the data.

Authorities also said that Shah, unlike the other crew and passengers, had no business or personal plans scheduled in his datebook for after the flight, according to the Mirror.

There are also claims that the 53-year-old was an extreme supporter of Malaysian Leader of Opposition Anwar Ibrahim, who was found guilty of sodomy in an appeals court just hours before Flight 370 went missing. Shah attended Ibrahim's trial, then immediately went to the airport.

In addition, one of Shah's friends, also a pilot, told reporters in March that the captain had been under mental duress.

"He's one of the finest pilots around and I'm no medical expert," the friend told the New Zealand Herald, "but with all that was happening in his life, Zaharie was probably in no state of mind to be flying."

Allegedly, Shah's marriage was falling apart, and he was also having problems with his girlfriend. Shah's brother-in-law, Asuad Khan, denied those claims last month – saying that Shah "had a good life," and the reports that implicate him in the plane's disappearance are false.

"I can see that a lot of people are saying a lot of things about him which is untrue," he told ABC Australia.

"He had a lot of money, and he loved his daughter very much."

Police are still considering terrorism and mechanical failure as causes for the plane's disappearance. To date, no debris or evidence of a crash site have been found.

Newsletter Stay up to date with Christian Today
News
What should Christians make of Tommy Robinson?
What should Christians make of Tommy Robinson?

In demanding that the likes of Robinson be banned from the Oxford Union, the clergy are in effect setting their own limit on freedom of speech and freedom of religion.

Christian woman persecuted by Iranian regime sentenced to 9 years in prison
Christian woman persecuted by Iranian regime sentenced to 9 years in prison

A Christian convert in Iran has been sentenced to nine years and eight months in prison on trumped-up charges linked to state security and anti-government activity.

John Lennox fears AI is making us lazy
John Lennox fears AI is making us lazy

Christian media leaders heard calls for courage, authenticity and discernment at the recent Revive 2026 conference.

Does the Church of England need to re-think its messaging?
Does the Church of England need to re-think its messaging?

If you look at the Church of England’s communications all that it ever seems to highlight is the good works that Christians do to improve the temporal well-being of their neighbours. It is right to highlight these things, but they are not the primary reason for the Church’s existence.