No answers, only hope as MH370 China father heads home

Almost two months after he dashed to Beijing following the disappearance of his son`s flight, Yan Jiacheng finally left a hotel he shared with other desperate Chinese relatives, still clinging to the hope that he could be alive.

Beijing: Almost two months after he dashed to Beijing following the disappearance of his son`s flight, Yan Jiacheng finally left a hotel he shared with other desperate Chinese relatives, still clinging to the hope that he could be alive.

"I don`t want to leave of course, but I have no choice," Yan told AFP as relatives drove him 800 kilometres home after Malaysia Airlines said it would no longer provide accommodation in Beijing.

Softly spoken and non-confrontational, Yan was one of the quiet ones at the Lido hotel in the Chinese capital.

The hotel became a powder keg of conflict between highly emotional relatives seeking answers about their missing loved ones, and airline officials and Malaysian government representatives stymied by the way flight MH370 vanished.

Yan`s younger son Yan Ling, 30, was one of the 153 Chinese passengers on the flight -- making up two-thirds of those on board.
The last time the pair had spent time together was when Yan Ling returned to the family home for Chinese New Year in late January.

The annual pilgrimage is replicated in tens of millions of homes across the country, where high-achieving offspring often find work in the booming cities after university, rather than in their backwater hometowns.

During regular family briefings at the hotel, the 60-year-old would sit near the back of the hall, sipping a cup of iced water provided by airline support staff and lifting his head only during the occasions when tempers frayed.

Sometimes he would find solitude away from the insults and allegations, sitting outside in the car park with his thoughts and a cigarette, while relatives burst out of the door behind him sobbing into their handkerchiefs.

In the early days after the plane`s disappearance, the signs of sleepless nights were etched on his face, with bags under his eyes and his thin hair ruffled.
Now Yan is more outwardly composed, but inside he remains crippled.

He has "felt nothing but despair", he says, since his life was turned upside down by a phone call from his son`s girlfriend on the morning of March 8, 56 days ago.

"She said two sentences. She told me `The plane is missing. Yan is missing`. Then she said nothing more, as she burst out crying," said Yan, from Yancheng in the eastern province of Jiangsu.

His son`s boss telephoned him to say that the aircraft was missing and he should travel to the capital.

"I dropped everything and made the journey here."

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