The Last Day of Malaysia Airline: Passengers with Stolen Passports
A man claiming to be the friend
of two Iranians who used fake passports to board the missing Malaysia Airlines
flight told ABC News that the men stayed at his home the night before the
flight vanished.
Mohammad Mallaeibeasir, 18,
told ABC News that he is a student living in Malaysia who went to high school
with one of the men who is believed to have used a fake passport to board the
missing flight. He said the other man was a friend of the friend's, and the
pair stayed at Mallaeibeasir's the night before the flight took off.
Mallaeibeasir identified the
men as Pouria Nour Mohammadi, 19, and Reza Devalar, 29, are both from Iran. He
said he went to high school with Pouria, but had not seen him for a couple of
years.
They stayed with Mallaeibeasir
and his roommate Friday night, and then Mallaeibeasir drove them to the
airport, where they used stolen Italian and Austrian passports to board
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 on Saturday morning, he said.
The plane lost contact with air
control and radar approximately an hour into its flight and disappeared without
a trace. A massive search operation is under way for any sign of the plane in
the waters between Malaysia and Vietnam.
Mallaeibeasir said he did not
know the men were using fake passports until the news stories broke and
Pouria's mother called him and told him about it. Mallaeibeasir says he then
called Malaysia Airlines and told them all of the information he knew.
Today Malaysian Police Chief
Khalid Abu Bakar identified one of the two men with stolen passports as Pouria
Nour Mohammad Mehrdad, 19, and said he was likely trying to enter Germany to
seek asylum. His mother contacted authorities after he didn't arrive in
Frankfurt.
Interpol later identified the
other man as Delavar Syed Mohammad Reza, 29.
Law enforcement sources told
ABC news today that the men's tickets were purchased by an Iranian man known as
"Mr. Ali."
Mallaeibeasir said that when
Pouria and Reza were staying at his house, he heard them briefly talking to an
"Ali" on the phone.
"The last night when they
were in my home they were talking on the phone for a long time. They were
talking in Persian, in their room, and I heard them say 'OK Ali' like that in
Persian. I didn't understand because it was like, five seconds. I went into the
room to take water from my fridge and I came out and they said, 'Be quiet,
we're talking.'"
Besides the hushed phone
conversations, Mallaeibeasir said that the pair just hung out with him and his
housemate and watched movies. Then Mallaeibeasir drove them to the airport.
"They stayed here only the
last night before the flight. They were supposed to stay in Malaysia for three
days but I think they stayed for one week," Mallaebeasir said. "They
were with me because I had a car and I told them I will take you to the
airport. They came to my house."
Mallaeibeasir and Pouria went
to high school together in Tehran two years ago, before Mallaebeasir moved to
Malaysia to study business information technology. He said he did not know Reza
until the two arrived at his home for a quick night's stay.
Mallaeibeasir said he did not
ask Pouria or Reza why they were in Malaysia. Pouria said he was heading to
Germany or Copenhagen after Malaysia in order to visit his mother because they
were having family problems, Mallaeibeasir said.
The two men traveled lightly,
Mallaebeasier said. Pouria had a mountain climbing-type backpack and a laptop,
while Reza carried a suitcase and a laptop, he said.
After he dropped them at the
airport, Mallaebeasier called the men on their cell phones. Pouria answered but
hung up quickly, and Mallaebeasier ended up talking to Reza for about three
minutes, he said.
SOURCE:
abcnews.go.com
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