A relative of Chinese passengers aboard the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 waits for a news briefing by the Airlines' officials. Photo / AP
Rooms to be vacated for grand prix fans, splitting up support network.
The families of passengers missing on Flight 370 for more than 11 days are being pushed out of their Kuala Lumpur hotel, as they wait for news of their loved ones.
Angry relatives labelled Malaysia Airlines "heartless" after being told their rooms at a 5-star resort hotel in Cyberjaya where they had been staying since last week were pre-booked for the Malaysian Formula 1 Grand Prix from this weekend.
A young Malaysian boy prays at an event for the missing passengers. Photo / AP
It also emerged last night that a flight simulator taken from the home of one of the missing pilots held software for five practice runways scattered around the Indian Ocean - where the search is now focused.
About 15 relatives had taken up the offer by Malaysia Airlines to travel to Kuala Lumpur to wait for news on the missing flight, including three relatives of Auckland man Ximin Wang. Mr Wang's family have since returned to New Zealand.
The Herald understands that relatives are now deciding whether to go to relocated hotels yet to be booked by the carrier.
"It is hard enough waking up every day, and now they want to move us," said one woman. "They are really so heartless."
Hotel rooms are hard to come by in Kuala Lumpur due to the influx of international media covering the missing plane and people there for the race.
A support worker said it was tough for the families to be split up because they relied heavily on each other for support.
Auxiliary police and guards have been seconded to watch over the entrance of the hotel in a bid to block the media from accessing the relatives, but one woman spoke to the Herald briefly when she stepped outside the hotel.
Image 1 of 43: Christchurch man Paul Weeks was among the 239 passengers on the Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 which went missing over the Gulf of Thailand.
She felt like a prisoner, she said, and was being monitored all the time and being instructed not to speak to the media.
As suspicions harden that the plane was hijacked, investigators have been examining virtual flight paths used on a simulator built by Zaharie Ahmad Shah, one of the two pilots on board the flight.
Malaysian news outlet Berita Harian reported that software found included the Male International Airport in the Maldives, three airports in India and Sri Lanka, and one belonging to the United States military base in Diego Garcia. All have runways of 1000m.
At the weekend investigators confirmed that the Boeing 777 was deliberately diverted during its overnight flight.
They established the jet continued flying for six hours, but there has been no sign of it, its 227 passengers or 12 crew since.
At least 26 countries are now assisting in the ground, sea and aerial search for the plane. Photo / AP
Rather than manually operating the plane's controls, whoever altered the path typed seven or eight keystrokes into a computer situated between the captain and the co-pilot, according to officials.
The computer is called the Flight Management System.
It directs the plane from point to point specified in the flight plan submitted before a flight.
It is not clear whether the plane's path was reprogrammed before or after it took off, the Times said.
Hijacking, sabotage, or pilot suicide have not been ruled out.
Backgrounds of passengers and staff associated with the flight are being checked but the investigation is still heavily focused on pilots Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 57, and Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27.