As the frantic search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 continues, Danica Weeks refuses to give up hope that her husband Paul, 39, will be found alive.
Speaking with Nine News Perth, Danica revealed that her husband handed her his wedding ring and his watch just before boarding the flight, to give to their two boys just in case something happened to him.
He was en route to start a dream job in Mongolia, his first fly-in, fly-out job with Transwest Mongolia. He was excited but sad to be leaving his family. As he was saying goodbye, Paul said, “If something should happen to me, then the wedding ring should go to the first son that gets married and then the watch to the second.”
Paul Weeks is a former soldier who was born in New Zealand and moved his young family to Perth after their Christchurch home was ruined by earthquakes. They have a three-year-old son named Lincoln and an 11-month old son named Jack.
In the week before leaving for his new job, Danica says that Paul took lots of photos of his boys. “I can’t give up hope,” she told WA Today. “I would love him to walk through that door, hold him one more time … I see him everywhere in the house.”
Paul is one of 227 passengers and 12 crew members missing. The Malaysia Airlines flight disappeared on Saturday morning somewhere between Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
Six of those passengers were from Australa, 152 from China, 38 from Malaysia, seven from Indonesia and the rest were from India, the US, France, New Zealand, Canada, the Ukraine, Russia, Taiwan and the Netherlands.
As the desperate search continues and conspiracy theories grow more elaborate, Danica sits and hopes that Paul will call or better still, walk through the door.
The six missing Australians are:
Robert Lawton, 58 and his wife Catherine, 54
Rodney and Mary Burrows, both 50-plus
Gu Naijun and Li Yuan
Paul Weeks is listed as a missing New Zealand passenger, as per his passport.
It’s been six days since the Boeing 777 disappeared with no trace. More than 40 planes and ships from at least 10 nations have been scouring the waters between Malaysia and Vietnam. The plane dropped off the radar less than an hour into the flight without sending a distress signal.
Malaysia Airlines has released a statement saying the search area has been expanded. They are also investigating claims the plane veered off course.
Images courtesy of Nine News and Sky News.
We’re thinking of the families and friends of all the 227 passengers and 12 crew still missing after the disappearance of their Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
Top Comments
He didn't want the ring nicked in CH. No big deal
He would NOT have known of the impending abduction, unless he was psychic.
If you look at the civil radar plot in forbiddenknowledgetv, the one the Malaysia DESTROYED after 12 hours, you will note an unidentified target moving at 2,500mph, then stopping at the edge of the scope. Meanwhile 370 does a few sharp turns, but not back, drops instantly to sea level, shoots forward and vanishes.
Before you scream nutter off your meds, as nasa, seti, and astronomers say there are no intelligently controlled ufos around here,
open Larry King, CNN, ufos shut down missile silos in US, UK and USSR.
open wikipedia, Valentich, Cessna, Melbourne, Australia, ufo abduction. All recorded and not erase!
open www.theyfly .com
The pyrotechnics observed by a NZ oil driller in the S China Sea was probably a high tech snatch..
my husband works fly in fly out in 3rd world countries and its standard to take the jewellery off at the airport and give to me.....some people would kill you for that little bit of gold on your finger and jewellery makes you a target for thieves. I understand her pain...whilst you acknowledge the risk of such a job its very much a wont happen to me process if thinking.
that makes a lot of sense. Even in countries like Thailand and Italy, I've always been sure not to wear jewellery if venturing into crowded areas, as fair skin and jewellery scream potential tourist to pickpocket.