"Don't listen to speculation, basically it's not fair to the pilot's family. It's about family and he has children and this time, if you're wrong, how are you going to repair the damage," acting Malaysian Transport Minister Hishamuddin Hussein said.
The UK's Sunday Times reported yesterday that the Royal Malaysian Police now regarded MH370 pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah as the major suspect in the disappearance of Flight MH370.
They were also discussing a new phase and the use of suitable assets for the operation to locate the aircraft, the minister said.
"That is very important in this new phase because without knowing or deciding where this area is going to be, it's very difficult for us to understand what sort of equipment is needed, which have specific capabilities, for the search mission," he told reporters.
The criminal inquiry does not rule out the possibility that the Boeing 777-200 plane was lost due to mechanical failure or terrorism, but the police view is that if it was the result of human action, the captain was the most likely perpetrator, the Sunday Times report said.
Malaysia's special branch focused the inquiry on Captain Zaharie Shah, 53, after intelligence checks failed to substantiate any suspicions about the other people on board the jet, the report said.
The disappearance of the plane is one of the greatest mysteries in aviation history.
Detectives conducted more than 170 interviews. They found that Zaharie, an outgoing, married man with a penchant for gadgetry and postings on social media, appeared to have made no social or work commitments for the future, the report said.
This stood in contrast to the plans of his co-pilot, Fariq Hamid, and the rest of the crew.
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