මැලේසියානු ගුවන් යානයක් අතුරුදහන් වෙයි

යාළුවා

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    මීගමුව
    Aviation experts say that the debris will be found soon and its just a matter of time cz of the vast area of concerned sea area ,its not like you idiots backyards fuckers :lol::lol::lol: theyll find it soon just wait without posting fucked up stupid theories in here.

    උඹේ කාටහරිත් ඔහොම උන දාට උඹට හිතෙයි ඔය වගේ මෝඩ තියරීස්
     

    Harsh7046

    Well-known member
  • Dec 8, 2009
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    x30228911-01_big.gif.pagespeed.ic.AOLbbA7HNi.webp




    source http://www.nationmultimedia.com/nat...assports-used-by-pair-on-missin-30228911.html

    තායි පොලිස් කාරයොන්ට හැමදේම impossible තමයි. lol

    Pattaya police chief Pol Colonel Suphachai Phuikaewkham said the bookings were made online, initially through Grand Horizon Travel, which contacted Six Stars Travel, which later purchased the air tickets. This meant it was impossible to identify the people who made the bookings, or where they did this, as requests for the bookings were made online, the officer said.

    සුපචයි පුකෙයිවඛම්
     

    BINGU_PUTHA

    Well-known member
  • Apr 26, 2013
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    Aviation experts say that the debris will be found soon and its just a matter of time cz of the vast area of concerned sea area ,its not like you idiots backyards fuckers :lol::lol::lol: theyll find it soon just wait without posting fucked up stupid theories in here.

    Hutto dont you know anything about aviation history??? there have been lots of incidents like these that the investigators took more than 5 days to locate the debris and to confirm the reason for the incident...Its not like searching in your backyard stupid fuckers just wait without posting fucked up stupid theories ...Debris will be located soon :lol::lol::lol:

    I too think so. This is not a first time happened like this. It may take a week or more. see CNN (it is like finding a needle in a haystack).
     

    meeka

    Well-known member
  • Oct 1, 2008
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    සිරියස් කියන්නේ මචන් ලංකාවේ ඉන්නේ මොකක් හරි ලොකු විපතක් වුණාම තමන්ගේ දේවල් පවා අමතක කරලා එකෙන් බේරෙන්න උදව් කරන කට්ටියක්. එකට අපි ආඩම්බර වෙන්න ඕනෑ.

    දැක්කා නේ සුනාමි සීන් එකේදී කට්ටිය උදව් කරපු හැටි.

    අනික පාරේ accident එකක් වුනත් කොච්චර කට්ටිය උදව් කරන්න එනවද

    සුනාමි වලදී නම් හැමෝම උදව් කරා.. එත් පාරවල් වල උන, වෙන සමහර accident වලදී නම් මිනිස්සු එච්චර බලන්නේ නෑ බන් දැන් ... ෆොටෝ ගහනව විතරයි
     

    yasiru2k

    Well-known member
  • Jan 7, 2011
    5,956
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    83
    ටෙරරිස්ට් ඇටාක් එකක් කියල දැනගෙන මේක කොහේ හරි මුහුදේ සේෆ් ප්ලේස් එකකට අරන් පිපෙරෙව්වත්ද??? මලසියන් කට්ටිය සද්දයක් නැත්තේ එකද ? :baffled::baffled: අතිශය රහස් මෙහෙයුමක් වත් ගියද බන්.. දැන් නම් විකාර හිතෙන්නේ... :oo::oo::oo:
    මටත් දැන් ඕක හිතෙනවා බං, හයිජැක් කරලා උන් ඇටෑක් එකකට යනබව දැනගෙන එහෙමමම් දුන්නද දන්නේ නෑ, මං හිතෙන්නේ නෑ හයිජැක් කරපු උන්ගෙ බලාපොරොත්තුව ඇටැක් එකක් නම් උන් මේක ලැන්ඩ් කරලා බෝම්බ පුරව පුරව ඉඳියි කියලා.
     

    යාළුවා

    Well-known member
  • Jul 5, 2013
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    මීගමුව
    What happened to Flight 370? Four scenarios fuel speculation among experts



    1. Scenario: Bomb? Or 'dry run'?


    Fact: Two stolen passports have been linked to people who held tickets for the flight.
    Analysis: This points to the possibility that someone on a terrorism watch list may have boarded the plane and blown it up. However, the stolen passports don't necessarily mean the plane was an actual target. It's possible, says former U.S. Department of Transportation Inspector General Mary Schiavo, that terrorists may have been performing a "dry run" for a future attack. Or, Schiavo said, "it could be just criminal business as usual," because "there are lots of stolen passports" used by travelers around the world.
    Fact: So far, no debris field of plane wreckage has been linked to the 777, which would indicate a bomb blast.
    Analysis: When Robert Francis, former vice chairman of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, heard about the missing plane, his immediate thought was: "For some reason the aircraft blew up and there was no signal, there was nothing." The fact that the plane disappeared from radar without warning indicated to Francis "there was something unprecedented that hasn't happened before."
    What about satellite technology? Is it possible that data from orbiting satellites might show a flash or infrared heat signature from an explosion? Very unlikely, says satellite expert Brian Weeden, who spent years tracking space junk in orbit for the U.S. Air Force. Dozens of government and private satellites orbit the earth, looking down from distances from 300 kilometers to 1,500 kilometers (185 to 930 miles). It's a long shot that one of them coincidentally floated over at the exact right time and location to capture a flash from an explosion.
    However, there's an "off chance," Weeden says, that a super secret U.S. government satellite orbiting 22,000 miles in space might have grabbed evidence. These satellites are in geosynchronous orbit. As a group, they can observe virtually the entire globe. "We know that their mission is to detect ballistic missile launches via heat," says Weeden, now a technical adviser for Secure World Foundation. "We don't know if they're sensitive enough to track something like a bomb blast, even if that's what happened."
    Then there's another unanswerable question: Would the government hesitate to release such an image for fear of revealing the satellite system's ultra classified capability?


    2. Scenario: Hijacking?

    Fact: Before it disappeared, radar data indicated the plane may have turned around to head back to Kuala Lumpur. Is that a clue that a hijacker had ordered the plane to change course?
    Analysis: So far, there have been no reports that the flight crew sent any signals that a hijacking had occurred.


    3. Scenario: Mechanical failure?

    Fact: The absence of a debris field suggests the possibility that pilots were forced to ditch the plane and it landed on water without breaking up, finally sinking to the ocean floor.
    Analysis: But if that were the case, then why no emergency signal? These planes are able to perform a "miracle on the Hudson" maneuver. They have the ability to glide more than 100 miles and belly land on the water with both engines out, says former 777 pilot Keith Wolzinger, now a civil aviation consultant with The Spectrum Group. During the time it would take for a plane to glide 100 miles, it seems likely that pilots would be able able to send an SOS.
    Fact: The missing plane had suffered a clipped wing tip in the past, but Boeing repaired it, and the jet was safe to fly, said Malaysia Airlines CEO Ahmad Jauhari Yahya on Sunday.
    Analysis: "Anytime there's been previous damage to an airplane, even though it's been repaired, and repaired within standards ... it kind of sends a warning flag," says Wolzinger. Experts agree the Boeing 777 is one of the world's most reliable aircraft. During its development it was subject to some of the most rigorous testing in commercial aviation history. "I've been talking with colleagues," Wolzinger says. "We're all baffled by this." The 777 boasts some of the most powerful and well-tested engines in the world, he says. "The reliability of airliner engines in general is impeccable these days," he says. "This is a safe plane."
    4. Scenario: Pilot error
    Fact: So far, there are no known indications that pilot error contributed to the aircraft going missing.
    Analysis: Some aviation experts have compared Flight 370 to the crash of Air France Flight 447 in 2009. All 228 passengers and crew died when the plane went down in a storm in the Atlantic en route from Brazil to Paris. After an expensive, nearly two-year search across the deep ocean floor, the twin-engine Airbus A330's wreckage was finally found and the voice and data recorders recovered. A French investigation blamed flight crew for failing to understand "they were in a stall situation and therefore never undertook any recovery maneuvers." But unlike Flight 447, weather was reported as good along Flight 370's scheduled route and didn't appear to present a threat.
    Asiana Airlines Flight 217 -- a Boeing 777 -- fell short during a runway approach last July at San Francisco International Airport. Three people were killed and more than 180 others hurt. National Transportation Safety Board investigators have focused on pilot reliance on automated flight systems as a possible contributor to the crash, but a final report has not yet been released.

    Source - http://edition.cnn.com/2014/03/10/world/asia/malaysia-plane-scenarios/index.html?hpt=hp_c2
    March 10, 2014 -- Updated 1923 GMT (0323 HKT)
     
    Last edited:

    Harsh7046

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  • Dec 8, 2009
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    මටත් දැන් ඕක හිතෙනවා බං, හයිජැක් කරලා උන් ඇටෑක් එකකට යනබව දැනගෙන එහෙමමම් දුන්නද දන්නේ නෑ, මං හිතෙන්නේ නෑ හයිජැක් කරපු උන්ගෙ බලාපොරොත්තුව ඇටැක් එකක් නම් උන් මේක ලැන්ඩ් කරලා බෝම්බ පුරව පුරව ඉඳියි කියලා.

    :):)
    වියට්නාම් ටවර් එක ගන්න ඔන්න මෙන්න තියල ඉස්සුවෙ ඒක නිස වෙන්නත් පුලුවන්. මැලේසියන් කාරයො ගොලුබෙල්ලො වගෙ හිමින් වැඩකරන්නෙත් එක එක දේවල් හන්ග හන්ග ඉන්නෙත් ඒක නිසා වෙන්න පුලුවන්, හැබැයි මේක එහෙම වෙලා අහුවුනොත් හිතන්න අමාරුයි චීනෙන් උන්ට යහතින් ඉන්න දෙයි කියල
     

    Naruto7

    Well-known member
  • Dec 13, 2011
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    ~අනන්තයෙ~
    මටත් දැන් ඕක හිතෙනවා බං, හයිජැක් කරලා උන් ඇටෑක් එකකට යනබව දැනගෙන එහෙමමම් දුන්නද දන්නේ නෑ, මං හිතෙන්නේ නෑ හයිජැක් කරපු උන්ගෙ බලාපොරොත්තුව ඇටැක් එකක් නම් උන් මේක ලැන්ඩ් කරලා බෝම්බ පුරව පුරව ඉඳියි කියලා.

    No hijack idiots..:lol::lol::lol: Media reports say the two passengers travelling with stolen passports on board MH370 were Iranians. A friend of one of the passengers said he had hosted the pair in Kuala Lumpur days before their flight to Beijing. The friend claimed that the men had bought the fake passports as they wanted to migrate to Europe.

    Fuckers read proper updates not RIVIRA or SWARNAWAHINI :lol::lol::lol::lol:

     

    meeka

    Well-known member
  • Oct 1, 2008
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    මටත් දැන් ඕක හිතෙනවා බං, හයිජැක් කරලා උන් ඇටෑක් එකකට යනබව දැනගෙන එහෙමමම් දුන්නද දන්නේ නෑ, මං හිතෙන්නේ නෑ හයිජැක් කරපු උන්ගෙ බලාපොරොත්තුව ඇටැක් එකක් නම් උන් මේක ලැන්ඩ් කරලා බෝම්බ පුරව පුරව ඉඳියි කියලා.

    ඔව් බන්.. එහෙම දෙයක් උනානම් කවමදාවත් කියන්නෙත් නෑ..
     

    යාළුවා

    Well-known member
  • Jul 5, 2013
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    මීගමුව
    No hijack idiots..:lol::lol::lol: Media reports say the two passengers travelling with stolen passports on board MH370 were Iranians. A friend of one of the passengers said he had hosted the pair in Kuala Lumpur days before their flight to Beijing. The friend claimed that the men had bought the fake passports as they wanted to migrate to Europe.

    Fuckers read proper updates not RIVIRA or SWARNAWAHINI :lol::lol::lol::lol:


    What happened to Flight 370? Four scenarios fuel speculation among experts



    1. Scenario: Bomb? Or 'dry run'?


    Fact: Two stolen passports have been linked to people who held tickets for the flight.
    Analysis: This points to the possibility that someone on a terrorism watch list may have boarded the plane and blown it up. However, the stolen passports don't necessarily mean the plane was an actual target. It's possible, says former U.S. Department of Transportation Inspector General Mary Schiavo, that terrorists may have been performing a "dry run" for a future attack. Or, Schiavo said, "it could be just criminal business as usual," because "there are lots of stolen passports" used by travelers around the world.
    Fact: So far, no debris field of plane wreckage has been linked to the 777, which would indicate a bomb blast.
    Analysis: When Robert Francis, former vice chairman of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, heard about the missing plane, his immediate thought was: "For some reason the aircraft blew up and there was no signal, there was nothing." The fact that the plane disappeared from radar without warning indicated to Francis "there was something unprecedented that hasn't happened before."
    What about satellite technology? Is it possible that data from orbiting satellites might show a flash or infrared heat signature from an explosion? Very unlikely, says satellite expert Brian Weeden, who spent years tracking space junk in orbit for the U.S. Air Force. Dozens of government and private satellites orbit the earth, looking down from distances from 300 kilometers to 1,500 kilometers (185 to 930 miles). It's a long shot that one of them coincidentally floated over at the exact right time and location to capture a flash from an explosion.
    However, there's an "off chance," Weeden says, that a super secret U.S. government satellite orbiting 22,000 miles in space might have grabbed evidence. These satellites are in geosynchronous orbit. As a group, they can observe virtually the entire globe. "We know that their mission is to detect ballistic missile launches via heat," says Weeden, now a technical adviser for Secure World Foundation. "We don't know if they're sensitive enough to track something like a bomb blast, even if that's what happened."
    Then there's another unanswerable question: Would the government hesitate to release such an image for fear of revealing the satellite system's ultra classified capability?


    2. Scenario: Hijacking?

    Fact: Before it disappeared, radar data indicated the plane may have turned around to head back to Kuala Lumpur. Is that a clue that a hijacker had ordered the plane to change course?
    Analysis: So far, there have been no reports that the flight crew sent any signals that a hijacking had occurred.



    3. Scenario: Mechanical failure?

    Fact: The absence of a debris field suggests the possibility that pilots were forced to ditch the plane and it landed on water without breaking up, finally sinking to the ocean floor.
    Analysis: But if that were the case, then why no emergency signal? These planes are able to perform a "miracle on the Hudson" maneuver. They have the ability to glide more than 100 miles and belly land on the water with both engines out, says former 777 pilot Keith Wolzinger, now a civil aviation consultant with The Spectrum Group. During the time it would take for a plane to glide 100 miles, it seems likely that pilots would be able able to send an SOS.
    Fact: The missing plane had suffered a clipped wing tip in the past, but Boeing repaired it, and the jet was safe to fly, said Malaysia Airlines CEO Ahmad Jauhari Yahya on Sunday.
    Analysis: "Anytime there's been previous damage to an airplane, even though it's been repaired, and repaired within standards ... it kind of sends a warning flag," says Wolzinger. Experts agree the Boeing 777 is one of the world's most reliable aircraft. During its development it was subject to some of the most rigorous testing in commercial aviation history. "I've been talking with colleagues," Wolzinger says. "We're all baffled by this." The 777 boasts some of the most powerful and well-tested engines in the world, he says. "The reliability of airliner engines in general is impeccable these days," he says. "This is a safe plane."
    4. Scenario: Pilot error
    Fact: So far, there are no known indications that pilot error contributed to the aircraft going missing.
    Analysis: Some aviation experts have compared Flight 370 to the crash of Air France Flight 447 in 2009. All 228 passengers and crew died when the plane went down in a storm in the Atlantic en route from Brazil to Paris. After an expensive, nearly two-year search across the deep ocean floor, the twin-engine Airbus A330's wreckage was finally found and the voice and data recorders recovered. A French investigation blamed flight crew for failing to understand "they were in a stall situation and therefore never undertook any recovery maneuvers." But unlike Flight 447, weather was reported as good along Flight 370's scheduled route and didn't appear to present a threat.
    Asiana Airlines Flight 217 -- a Boeing 777 -- fell short during a runway approach last July at San Francisco International Airport. Three people were killed and more than 180 others hurt. National Transportation Safety Board investigators have focused on pilot reliance on automated flight systems as a possible contributor to the crash, but a final report has not yet been released.

    Source - http://edition.cnn.com/2014/03/10/world/asia/malaysia-plane-scenarios/index.html?hpt=hp_c2
    March 10, 2014 -- Updated 1923 GMT (0323 HKT)

    :rolleyes:
     

    Naruto7

    Well-known member
  • Dec 13, 2011
    4,311
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    ~අනන්තයෙ~
    No hijack idiots..:lol::lol::lol: Media reports say the two passengers travelling with stolen passports on board MH370 were Iranians. A friend of one of the passengers said he had hosted the pair in Kuala Lumpur days before their flight to Beijing. The friend claimed that the men had bought the fake passports as they wanted to migrate to Europe.

    Fuckers read proper updates not RIVIRA or SWARNAWAHINI..Stupid fuckers there is no hijack ,wait without making dumb posts assholes :lol::lol::lol::lol:
     

    delmar

    Well-known member
  • Oct 29, 2007
    27,269
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    හැමතැනම
    මගේ මතය නම් මේ පැහැර ගැනීමක්...

    දෙවන නියමුවා අන්තිමපාර පණිවුඩ හුවමාරු කරද්දි බයෙන් වගේ කතා කරලා තියනවා කියලා වාර්තා වෙනවා..
     

    යාළුවා

    Well-known member
  • Jul 5, 2013
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    මීගමුව
    No hijack idiots..:lol::lol::lol: Media reports say the two passengers travelling with stolen passports on board MH370 were Iranians. A friend of one of the passengers said he had hosted the pair in Kuala Lumpur days before their flight to Beijing. The friend claimed that the men had bought the fake passports as they wanted to migrate to Europe.

    Fuckers read proper updates not RIVIRA or SWARNAWAHINI..Stupid fuckers there is no hijack ,wait without making dumb posts assholes :lol::lol::lol::lol:

    What happened to Flight 370? Four scenarios fuel speculation among experts



    1. Scenario: Bomb? Or 'dry run'?


    Fact: Two stolen passports have been linked to people who held tickets for the flight.
    Analysis: This points to the possibility that someone on a terrorism watch list may have boarded the plane and blown it up. However, the stolen passports don't necessarily mean the plane was an actual target. It's possible, says former U.S. Department of Transportation Inspector General Mary Schiavo, that terrorists may have been performing a "dry run" for a future attack. Or, Schiavo said, "it could be just criminal business as usual," because "there are lots of stolen passports" used by travelers around the world.
    Fact: So far, no debris field of plane wreckage has been linked to the 777, which would indicate a bomb blast.
    Analysis: When Robert Francis, former vice chairman of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, heard about the missing plane, his immediate thought was: "For some reason the aircraft blew up and there was no signal, there was nothing." The fact that the plane disappeared from radar without warning indicated to Francis "there was something unprecedented that hasn't happened before."
    What about satellite technology? Is it possible that data from orbiting satellites might show a flash or infrared heat signature from an explosion? Very unlikely, says satellite expert Brian Weeden, who spent years tracking space junk in orbit for the U.S. Air Force. Dozens of government and private satellites orbit the earth, looking down from distances from 300 kilometers to 1,500 kilometers (185 to 930 miles). It's a long shot that one of them coincidentally floated over at the exact right time and location to capture a flash from an explosion.
    However, there's an "off chance," Weeden says, that a super secret U.S. government satellite orbiting 22,000 miles in space might have grabbed evidence. These satellites are in geosynchronous orbit. As a group, they can observe virtually the entire globe. "We know that their mission is to detect ballistic missile launches via heat," says Weeden, now a technical adviser for Secure World Foundation. "We don't know if they're sensitive enough to track something like a bomb blast, even if that's what happened."
    Then there's another unanswerable question: Would the government hesitate to release such an image for fear of revealing the satellite system's ultra classified capability?


    2. Scenario: Hijacking?

    Fact: Before it disappeared, radar data indicated the plane may have turned around to head back to Kuala Lumpur. Is that a clue that a hijacker had ordered the plane to change course?
    Analysis: So far, there have been no reports that the flight crew sent any signals that a hijacking had occurred.



    3. Scenario: Mechanical failure?

    Fact: The absence of a debris field suggests the possibility that pilots were forced to ditch the plane and it landed on water without breaking up, finally sinking to the ocean floor.
    Analysis: But if that were the case, then why no emergency signal? These planes are able to perform a "miracle on the Hudson" maneuver. They have the ability to glide more than 100 miles and belly land on the water with both engines out, says former 777 pilot Keith Wolzinger, now a civil aviation consultant with The Spectrum Group. During the time it would take for a plane to glide 100 miles, it seems likely that pilots would be able able to send an SOS.
    Fact: The missing plane had suffered a clipped wing tip in the past, but Boeing repaired it, and the jet was safe to fly, said Malaysia Airlines CEO Ahmad Jauhari Yahya on Sunday.
    Analysis: "Anytime there's been previous damage to an airplane, even though it's been repaired, and repaired within standards ... it kind of sends a warning flag," says Wolzinger. Experts agree the Boeing 777 is one of the world's most reliable aircraft. During its development it was subject to some of the most rigorous testing in commercial aviation history. "I've been talking with colleagues," Wolzinger says. "We're all baffled by this." The 777 boasts some of the most powerful and well-tested engines in the world, he says. "The reliability of airliner engines in general is impeccable these days," he says. "This is a safe plane."
    4. Scenario: Pilot error
    Fact: So far, there are no known indications that pilot error contributed to the aircraft going missing.
    Analysis: Some aviation experts have compared Flight 370 to the crash of Air France Flight 447 in 2009. All 228 passengers and crew died when the plane went down in a storm in the Atlantic en route from Brazil to Paris. After an expensive, nearly two-year search across the deep ocean floor, the twin-engine Airbus A330's wreckage was finally found and the voice and data recorders recovered. A French investigation blamed flight crew for failing to understand "they were in a stall situation and therefore never undertook any recovery maneuvers." But unlike Flight 447, weather was reported as good along Flight 370's scheduled route and didn't appear to present a threat.
    Asiana Airlines Flight 217 -- a Boeing 777 -- fell short during a runway approach last July at San Francisco International Airport. Three people were killed and more than 180 others hurt. National Transportation Safety Board investigators have focused on pilot reliance on automated flight systems as a possible contributor to the crash, but a final report has not yet been released.

    Source - http://edition.cnn.com/2014/03/10/wo...html?hpt=hp_c2
    March 10, 2014 -- Updated 1923 GMT (0323 HKT)

    :rolleyes:
     

    bestdivx

    Well-known member
  • Dec 17, 2007
    1,814
    1,350
    113
    Cryptosphere
    එහෙනම් තායි වලින් ඔන්ලයින් බුක් කරානම් හරි ඕනි මගුලක්.. හොයන්න බෑනේ.. :lol::lol:
    ඔන්ලයින් විතරක් නෙවි බන් ඔෆ්ලයින් කලත් මුන්ට පිස්සු. 2011 දි මගේ මස 3 බබාල (නිවුන්) දෙන්නට ඔන්ලිනෙ බුක් කරන්න බැරි නිසා කොම්පැණිය ඒජන්ට් හරහා බුක් කරන්න ඩොකියුමන්ට්ස් ඇරිය. බබාලට තිබුනෙ ඉමර්ජෙන්සි පාස්පොර්ට් විතරයි. අපරාදෙ කියන්න බෑ උන් බබාල දෙන්නට සර්නේම්ස් 2ක් දාල:D මට ටිකට් එක ලැබුනෙ ෆ්ලයි කරන්න පැය 3ක් තියල. මාර කට්ටක් තමයි එදා කැවෙ.