Sabotage in the Cockpit: New Report Claims Pilots Intentionally Crashed Flight MU5735
A new investigative report from U.S. aviation authorities suggests that the 2022 Boeing crash in China was a deliberate act of mass murder by the flight crew.

A long-awaited report from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has finally shed light on the mysterious and tragic crash of China Eastern Flight MU5735. The Boeing 737-800 was cruising at 9,000 meters in 2022 when it suddenly entered a near-vertical dive, slamming into a mountainside and killing all 132 people on board. For four years, Chinese authorities provided minimal information, but the new U.S. data points toward a deliberate act of sabotage from within the cockpit.
The data, extracted from the flight data recorder and analyzed in the United States, reveals that someone manually and intentionally cut the fuel supply to both of the aircraft's engines. This action directly caused the plane to lose all propulsion and begin its fatal descent. Aviation experts told reporters that the data shows the fuel switches were moved to the "off" position just moments before the plane plummeted, leaving no doubt about the intentionality of the act.
Disturbing details from the British "Mirror" newspaper suggest that there may have been a struggle for control between the two pilots in the final minutes. However, the lack of any attempt to restart the engines or send a distress signal reinforces the theory that the crash was a suicide-mass murder. An aviation expert for CNN explained that the manual nature of the fuel cut is the "smoking gun" that eliminates mechanical failure as a possible cause.
The crash was the deadliest aviation disaster in China in decades, yet the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) has been accused of suppressing the truth. For years, the Chinese government cited "national security" as a reason for not releasing a final report or acknowledging the possibility of pilot interference. This new report from the NTSB effectively bypasses those restrictions, providing the families of the victims with the first real answers regarding the loss of their loved ones.
The revelation has sent shockwaves through the global aviation community, raising serious questions about pilot mental health and cockpit security protocols. While Boeing has faced intense scrutiny for mechanical issues in other models, this specific disaster appears to be a human failure rather than a technical one. The report serves as a grim conclusion to a four-year mystery that the Chinese government fought hard to keep hidden from the public eye.
As the findings become public, international pressure is expected to mount on China to be more transparent about internal investigations. For the families of the 132 passengers, the news confirms their worst fears while ending years of agonizing uncertainty. The deliberate nature of the crash adds a layer of malice to an already profound tragedy, making it one of the most haunting episodes in modern aviation history.