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MH370 search: Hunt for missing Malaysia Airlines plane set to be suspended

Families of those on board likely to resist any suggestions that search will end

Rozanna Latiff
Friday 22 July 2016 07:28 EDT
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Investigators believe the plane was deliberately flown thousands of miles off course before crashing into the southern Indian Ocean off Australia
Investigators believe the plane was deliberately flown thousands of miles off course before crashing into the southern Indian Ocean off Australia (Getty Images)

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The search for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 will be suspended if the aircraft is not found in the area now being searched, Malaysian authorities have said.

The Boeing 777 disappeared in March 2014 with 239 aboard during a flight from the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, to Beijing.

Almost $135 million (£130 million) has been spent on an underwater search spanning 46,332 square miles in the southern Indian Ocean.

Malaysian transport minister Liow Tiong Lai said in a statement released with his Chinese and Australian counterparts: “In the absence of new credible evidence, Malaysia, Australia and China have collectively agreed to suspend the search upon completion of the 120,000 sq-km search."

The families of those on board, most of whom were from China, have pressed hard for answers ever since the plane went missing, and are likely to decry any suggestion the search will end.

Liow said the team was not “giving up on the search for MH370” even if the less than 10,000 square kilometres that remains to be searched did not come up with anything.

“Should credible new information emerge which can be used to identify the specific location of the aircraft, consideration will be given in determining next steps,” the ministers said in the statement.

Investigators believe the plane was deliberately flown thousands of miles off course before crashing into the southern Indian Ocean off Australia.

Malaysian investigators said in 2015 there was nothing suspicious in the financial, medical or personal histories of pilots or crew.

Several pieces of aircraft wreckage have washed up on beaches in Africa and been positively identified as coming from MH370 but they shed little light on the mystery.

“While acknowledging the significance of the debris, ministers noted that to date, none of it had provided information that positively identified the precise location of the aircraft,” the ministers said.

The search has lasted more than two years but has found no sign of the main wreckage.

Searchers at the Dutch company leading the underwater hunt for MH370 told Reuters they believed the plane may have glided down to the sea rather than dived, meaning they have been scouring the wrong patch of ocean.

That was the first time officials directly involved in the search have lent some support to contested theories that someone was in control during the flight's final moments.

The glide theory is not supported by the investigating agencies, which includes Boeing Co, France's Thales SA British satellite company Inmarsat PLC and officials from the United States, Britain and Australia.

Liow told the news conference there was not enough evidence to confirm a controlled ditching, and added that he was confident the search was in the right place.

He said all data and information collected from the flight, search and debris of MH370 would be released to the public.

“It is in a very big volume, so it will take some time,” he said.

Reuters

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