Beijing, China (CNN) -- Jacks elder sister was returning from a - TopicsExpress



          

Beijing, China (CNN) -- Jacks elder sister was returning from a holiday. Her connecting flight was through Kuala Lumpur on MH370. After news of the missing flight, Jack took leave from his job to come to Beijing in search of answers. He shows me the text he received from Malaysia Airlines on his smartphone Monday night. This is the infamous text announcing that none of those on board survived. Jack scrolls down to the response he texted back in English, F--- You, although he spelled out the word. The fight is under way. Grief has turned to action. Malaysia Airlines, Boeing facing lawsuit Grieving relatives anguish continues MH370 relative tweets: Goodnight, daddy Thailand radar picked up unknown signal Inside a Beijing hotel room, Jack and eight other passengers relatives crowd around three laptops on a coffee table. They are discussing, downloading, organizing. Whats the next move? There is purpose in the air. Theyve already protested in front of the Malaysian embassy in China. Now theyve decided to share with the media their smartphone video of meetings with Malaysian officials. They have designated themselves the media committee. Eighteen days ago, they were busy with jobs and family life. Today, these former strangers are now partners in a mission: to push for answers and find their loved ones. They are not satisfied with the Malaysian governments explanation that satellite data indicates the plane most likely crashed in the southern part of the Indian Ocean. The relatives want more information and tangible proof like debris. Its an irresponsible conclusion with no direct evidence, says Steve Wang, whose mother was on the flight. If there is no evidence, we still have hope. Hes wearing a white t-shirt displaying blue Chinese characters that read: Pray for the passengers of MH370. We wish you a safe return.
Posted on: Thu, 27 Mar 2014 08:20:10 +0000

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