Christine Negroni, an aviation writer and award-winning journalist, claims that the co-pilot was the only person alive at the moment when the doomed Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 crashed into the ocean.
The Boeing 777 lost contact with air traffic control on 8 March 2014 over the South China Sea some 40 minutes into the flight while heading from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Military radars showed that the aircraft, which was carrying 289 passengers and crew, turned around and flew back across Malaysiatowards the southwestern Indian Ocean.
Negroni, who has been investigating the tragedy for years, suggests that the plane depressurised half an hour after take-off while captain Zaharie Shah was in the business-class bathroom near the flight desk, which is also used by the flight crew.
She assumes that Zaharie failed to get back onto the flight deck, and first officer Fariq Abdul Hamid then tried to rescue the flight by landing it at Malaysia's Langkawi Airport. It was widely reported that the co-pilot had graduated from Langkawi Aerospace Flying Academy, situated close to the airport's runway, which made Negroni suggest that he tried to land there because it was so familiar.
Fariq was unable to land the plane there because of oxygen deprivation, she believes, but he remained alive for hours.
READ MORE: MH370 Pilot's 'Mystery Caller' Breaks Silence Five Years After Tragedy
"The plane starts heading south," Negroni told the Daily Star. "Whatever that time period is, that's the period of time I believe he (Fariq) went unconscious."
"But dead is a whole other matter, because there was an incapacitation case in the US: two pilots were incapacitated, and flew a ghost flight that crash landed in Mexico."
"The oxygen available for the passengers was about 15 minutes, so the passengers were all dead, there's no chance they were resuscitated, they were dead long before that plane hit the water."
"Some farmer comes across the aircraft, and the first officer was still alive, and that was hours later."
"She died, but she was still alive at that time. I think you can be oxygen deprived for a long time without being dead."
"The oxygen available for the passengers was about 15 minutes, so the passengers were all dead, there's no chance they were resuscitated, they were dead long before that plane hit the water."
Almost five years later, the disappearance of MH370 remains one of the biggest aviation mysteries of all time. Two extensive search operations have been carried out in the southwestern Indian Ocean where the plane supposedly crashed, but they ended up yielding no results. Last July, Malaysian officials admitted in a 495-page report that they were unable to determine the real cause for its disappearance, adding that the Boeing's controls could have been manipulated by a third party.