Accessibility links

Breaking News

Australian Planes Spot Objects in New Search Area for Malaysian Airliner


An orangutan watches a popsicle after zoo-keepers gave animals iced food to keep them cool as temperatures soar at Rome&#39;s zoo, Italy.<br />
&nbsp;
An orangutan watches a popsicle after zoo-keepers gave animals iced food to keep them cool as temperatures soar at Rome&#39;s zoo, Italy.<br /> &nbsp;
Search planes and ships are scouring the Indian Ocean in hopes of finding debris from the wreckage of missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370.

On Friday, surveillance aircraft spotted multiple objects while looking in a new search area about 1,850 kilometers west of the Australian city of Perth.

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority said an Orion surveillance plane had sent back images of the objects, which are being assessed. AMSA says a Chinese Maritime Administration patrol ship is in the area and and will be in position to locate the objects on Saturday.

The search was shifted more than 1,000 kilometers northeast on Friday after investigators determined the missing jetliner was travelling faster and expending fuel quicker than previously estimated, reducing the distance it flew.

AMSA General Manager John Young said Friday the information, based on radar data, is the "most credible lead" so far in the search for the wreckage, but warned there is "a long way to go yet."

"This is the normal business of search and rescue operations - that new information comes to light, refined analysis take you to a different place. I don't count the original work a waste of time."

Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said given ocean drift, the new location could still be consistent with possible debris spotted in satellite photos over the past week near the old search location.

Hishammuddin also said Malaysia has received fresh satellite images from Thai and Japanese authorities showing more possible objects in the old search location. He did not specify when the photos were taken.

The extremely remote search location and bad weather at sea have kept authorities from reaching the possible debris from the Malaysian airliner, which disappeared March 8 with 239 people on board.

Weather conditions have improved since Thursday, when search planes were forced to fly back to Australia. Australian authorities say 10 aircraft are involved in Friday's mission. Six boats are also relocating to the area.

Once wreckage is found, the search effort will then focus on finding the plane's flight data recorder, or black box, which should provide clues about what went wrong.

Malaysian officials believe, based on a complex analysis of satellite data, that the Boeing 777 almost certainly crashed into the sea, far from any land.
  • 16x9 Image

    VOA News

    The Voice of America provides news and information in more than 40 languages to an estimated weekly audience of over 326 million people. Stories with the VOA News byline are the work of multiple VOA journalists and may contain information from wire service reports.

XS
SM
MD
LG