Current:Home > ScamsMH370 vanished a decade ago and search efforts stopped several years later. A U.S. company wants to try again. -StockHorizon
MH370 vanished a decade ago and search efforts stopped several years later. A U.S. company wants to try again.
View
Date:2025-04-18 22:56:32
Melbourne — Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said Monday he would be "happy to reopen" the search for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 if "compelling" evidence emerged, opening the door to a renewed hunt a decade after the plane disappeared.
"If there is compelling evidence that it needs to be reopened, we will certainly be happy to reopen it," he said when asked about the matter during a visit to Melbourne.
His comments came as the families marked 10 years since the plane vanished in the Indian Ocean with 239 people aboard.
"I don't think it's a technical issue. It's an issue affecting the lives of people and whatever needs to be done must be done," he said.
Malaysia Airlines flight 370, a Boeing 777 aircraft, disappeared from radar screens on March 8, 2014, while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Despite the largest search in aviation history, the plane has never been found and the operation was suspended in January 2017.
About 500 relatives and their supporters gathered Sunday at a shopping center near the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur for a "remembrance day", with many visibly overcome with grief.
Some of the relatives came from China, where almost two-thirds of the passengers of the doomed plane were from.
"The last 10 years have been a nonstop emotional rollercoaster for me," Grace Nathan, whose mother Anne Daisy was on the flight, told AFP. Speaking to the crowd, the 36-year-old Malaysian lawyer called on the government to conduct a new search.
Transport Minister Anthony Loke told reporters that "as far Malaysia is concerned, it is committed to finding the plane... cost is not the issue."
He told relatives at the gathering that he would meet with officials from Texas-based marine exploration firm Ocean Infinity, which conducted a previous unsuccessful search, to discuss a new operation.
"We are now awaiting for them to provide suitable dates and I hope to meet them soon," he said.
Ocean Infinity's chief executive Oliver Plunkett said in a statement shared with CBS News that his company felt it was "in a position to be able to return to the search" for MH370, and he said it had "submitted a proposal to the Malaysian government" to resume operations.
Plunkett said that since the previous effort was called off, Ocean Infinity had "focused on driving the transformation of operations at sea; innovating with technology and robotics to
further advance our ocean search capabilities."
He acknowledged the mission to find the plane was "arguably the most challenging" one his company had undertaken, and he gave no indication of any breakthroughs over the last six years or so. But he said his team had spent that time working with "many experts, some outside of Ocean Infinity, to continue analysing the data in the hope of narrowing the search area down to one in which success becomes potentially achievable."
It was not immediately clear if the Malaysian government, in the transport minister's upcoming meetings with Ocean Infinity officials, would see the "compelling" evidence Prime Minister Ibrahim said would convince him to launch a new operation, but Plunkett said in his statement that he and his company "hope to get back to the search soon."
An earlier Australia-led search that covered some 46,000 square miles in the Indian Ocean – an area roughly the size of Pennsylvania - found hardly any trace of the plane, with only some pieces of debris picked up.
- In:
- Malaysia Airlines Flight 370
- MH370
veryGood! (628)
Related
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Pelosi delivers speech to NC Democrats with notable absence — Biden’s future as nominee
- Global Microsoft CrowdStrike outage creates issues from Starbucks to schools to hospitals
- Elon Musk says X, SpaceX headquarters will relocate to Texas from California
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Why Caitlin Clark wasn't in WNBA 3-point contest tonight: 'I need a break'
- Horschel leads British Open on wild day of rain and big numbers at Royal Troon
- Will Kim Cattrall Return to And Just Like That? She Says…
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Ten Commandments posters won't go in Louisiana classrooms until November
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- British Open 2024 highlights: Daniel Brown slips up; Billy Horschel leads entering Round 4
- Triple-digit heat, meet wildfires: Parts of US face a 'smoky and hot' weekend
- WNBA All-Star game highlights: Arike Ogunbowale wins MVP as Olympians suffer loss
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Kate Hudson jokes she could smell Matthew McConaughey 'from a mile away' on set
- Gwyneth Paltrow Shares What Worries Her Most About Her Kids Apple and Moses
- Julianne Hough Influenced Me to Buy These 21 Products
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Bangladesh’s top court scales back government jobs quota after deadly unrest that has killed scores
‘We were not prepared’: Canada fought nightmarish wildfires as smoke became US problem
North Carolina’s Iconic College Town Struggles to Redevelop a Toxic Coal Ash Mound
Could your smelly farts help science?
How the Olympic Village Became Known For Its Sexy Escapades
Man pleads guilty to federal charges in attack on Louisville mayoral candidate
Rescue teams find hiker who was missing for 2 weeks in Kentucky’s Red River Gorge