'Goodnight daddy': Grieving daughter of Flight MH370 chief steward pays heartbreaking Twitter tribute
The grieving daughter of the chief steward on-board missing Flight MH370 paid a heartbreaking tribute to her father on Twitter.
Shortly after the families of the 239 passengers and crew were told their loved ones were likely to have been killed, Maira Elizabeth Nari tweeted 'Goodnight, daddy'.
Andrew Nari was working on the Malaysian Airlines flight when it disappeared more than two weeks ago. Today, families of those onboard were told the devastating news that the plane went down in the Indian Ocean and 'nobody survived'.
Maira then took to Twitter to express her grief.
She wrote: “I don't know what to say, what to think. I feel so lost, so blank. I'm just so tired. Goodnight, daddy. Sigh.. * hugs *,”
She also added: “God loves you more daddy...God loves them more."
Mr Nari was a staunch Liverpool fan and tonight the club tweeted its condolences to Maira.
It wrote on Twitter: "We prayed your father would come home. Tonight our thoughts are with you and families of all those lost . You won't walk alone."
Maria last week wrote on the social networking site to tell her father that Liverpool were winning against their rivals Manchester United.
Tonight, some of the families of those on-board the missing flight issued a strongly-worded statement criticising the Malaysian authorities.
As reported by Sky News, it read: "During the past 18 days since March 8, when Malaysia Airlines announced that it had lost contact with MH370, Malaysia Airlines, the government of Malaysia, and the military forces of Malaysia have concealed, delayed and hidden the truth from the relatives and the people of the world.
We prayed your father would come home @Gorgxous_ Tonight our thoughts are with you & families of all those lost. You won't walk alone
— Liverpool FC (@LFC) March 24, 2014
"This despicable act aimed to fool the relatives of the 154 Chinese passengers has devastated us physically and mentally, while misleading and delaying the rescue operation, wasting a lot of manpower, material resources and leading to the loss of precious rescue time.
"If the 154 of our loved ones have lost their lives, then Malaysia Airlines, the government of Malaysia and the military are really the executors."
The search for the flight will continue in the Indian Ocean
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