Leaders pledge every effort in plane hunt
MALAYSIAN and Australian leaders said yesterday that no effort would be spared to give the families of those on board missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 the answers they need.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak flew to Australia for briefings on the search and talks with his Australian counterpart Tony Abbott, whose country is overseeing the hunt in a huge and remote patch of the Indian Ocean.
“It is a very difficult search — the most difficult in human history. But as far as Australia is concerned, we are throwing everything we have at it,” Abbott said.
No trace of the Boeing 777 has been found nearly four weeks after it vanished in the early hours of March 8 on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board, more than two third of them Chinese.
Ten planes and nine ships were involved in search operations yesterday, scouring the ocean far off Australia’s southwest corner where investigators believe the plane may have ended up after unknown events occurred on board.
Najib, whose government has been harshly criticized by some passengers’ families for giving sometimes conflicting information about the flight and for the slow pace of the investigation, said everyone involved in the search was thinking of the families waiting desperately for news.
“I know that until we find the plane, many families cannot start to grieve,” Najib said. “I cannot imagine what they are going through. But I can promise them that we will not give up.
“We want to provide comfort to the families and we will not rest until answers are indeed found. In due time, we will provide a closure for this event.”
Najib met Abbott at the Australian base near Perth serving as the hub for a multinational search effort. They were briefed by Angus Houston, head of a joint agency overseeing the search.
Although Australia is coordinating the search, the investigation into the tragedy ultimately remains Malaysia’s responsibility. Najib said Australia had agreed to be an “accredited representative in the investigation” and would work with Malaysia on a comprehensive agreement on the search.
On Wednesday, officials warned that the investigation may never fully answer why the aircraft disappeared. A dearth of information has plagued investigators from the moment the plane’s transponders, which make the plane visible to commercial radar, were shut off.
Military radar picked up the jet just under an hour later, way off course on the other side of the Malay Peninsula. Authorities say that until then, its “movements were consistent with deliberate action by someone on the plane,” but nothing has been ruled out.
Police are investigating the pilots and crew for any evidence suggesting they may have hijacked or sabotaged the plane. The backgrounds of the passengers have been checked by investigators and nothing suspicious has been found.
Yesterday’s search zone was a 223,000 square kilometer patch of ocean 1,680km northwest of Perth.
The British navy’s HMS Echo reported one alert as it searched for sonic transmissions from the missing plane’s flight data recorder, but it was quickly discounted as a false alarm. False alerts can come from animals such as whales, or interference from shipping noise.
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