An oil slick has been detected in the Indian Ocean within the search
area for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 but has yet to be
analysed, the Australian leading the operation said on Monday.
"I can report that (Australian ship) Ocean Shield detected an oil slick yesterday evening in her current search area,"
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Ships and planes pursued Saturday the search for the missing
Malaysian airliner off Australia after Prime Minister Tony Abbott said
he was "very confident" that signals from the black box had been
detected.
The Australian-led search for the Boeing 777, which disappeared en
route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, is racing to gather as many signals
as possible to determine an exact resting place before a submersible is
sent down to find wreckage.
The Joint Agency coordination Centre (JACC) said Saturday that the
remote search area where the plane was believed to have gone down some
was still shrinking.
"Today, Australian defence vessel Ocean Shield continues more focused
sweeps with the towed pinger locator to try and locate further signals
related to the aircraft's black boxes.
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Search crews have regained contact with underwater pings detected over
the weekend that were consistent with Malaysia Airlines Flight 370’s
“black boxes,” increasing the chances that they have located the missing
jet.
Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, who is leading the multinational search
in the southern Indian Ocean, said Wednesday they have now detected
signals on four separate occasions in the same area. The latest signals
were weaker than the initial pings, suggesting the jet’s flight
recorders were close to running out of batteries.
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Australian officials in charge of helping search for missing Malaysia
Airlines flight MH370 said Monday that one of their ships had detected
signals that appear to be coming from a black-box recorder. Australian
official Angus Houston said the signals seemed consistent with those
from a black box, calling it "a most promising lead" and "very
encouraging." But he also said it may take several days to confirm
whether the transmissions are in fact recorders from the missing
passenger jet.
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Searchers scouring the Indian Ocean for Malaysia Airlines Flight
MH370 were hoping on Saturday to salvage debris for the first time which
could finally confirm whether the jet plunged into the sea.
Planes attached to the multinational operation spotted "multiple
objects" floating in the water on Friday after the focus of the search
moved to a new area on the strength of fresh data indicating the plane
was flying faster than first thought before it disappeared on March 8.
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Thunderstorms and gale-force winds threatened to impede a frantic
international search Thursday for wreckage from Flight MH370 after
satellite images of more than 100 floating objects sparked fresh hopes
of a breakthrough.
Malaysia said the imagery taken in recent days by a French satellite
showed "122 potential objects" in the remote southern Indian Ocean,
although nothing has yet been pulled from the treacherous seas despite a
multinational recovery operation.
But the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA), which is
coordinating the search some 2,500 kilometres (1,550 miles) southwest of
Perth, said they were in an area authorities have pinpointed as a
potential crash zone.
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New French satellite images show possible debris from a missing Malaysian
airliner deep in the southern Indian Ocean, Malaysia said yesterday,
adding to growing signs that the plane may have gone down in remote seas
off Australia.
This morning, Malaysia received new satellite images from the French
authorities showing potential objects in the vicinity of the southern
corridor," the Malaysian Transport Ministry said in a statement.
"Malaysia immediately relayed these images to the Australian rescue coordination centre."
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Australian rescue officials broadened the search area for missing
Malaysian flight MH370 Saturday and boosted the number of spotter planes
looking for it in the Indian Ocean, with weather conditions favourable.
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) is coordinating the
hunt in the vast southern search corridor for the jet that vanished on
March 8, focusing for a third day on an area of wild and remote sea
2,500 kilometres southwest of Perth.
On Friday five planes criss-crossed 23,000-square kilometres
(8,800-square miles) without any sightings of wreckage, and the search
area has now been widened.
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Australian authorities called on Friday for more aircraft and satellite
surveillance in pursuit of possible debris from Malaysia Airlines Flight
370, even as the stepped-up search increasingly relied on low-tech
tactics.
Air crews scanned the surface of the southern Indian Ocean with
binoculars from low-flying planes Friday as the massive multinational
operation to find the missing plane entered its 13th day, focusing on a
region where satellites had detected objects in the water. The day’s air
search ended at sunset with still no sign of the missing flight.
Satellite images of two objects, the longest of which was estimated to
be 79 feet and bobbing close to the surface of the sea, had been hailed
by Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott as a possible breakthrough in
the disappearance of the Flight 370 jetliner, which vanished from radar
screens on March 8 with 227 passengers and 12 crew on board. But by
Friday evening, searchers had still not found any trace of the objects
from the satellite images.
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A satellite search has found two objects in the Indian Ocean that may be
related to the missing Malaysian Airlines flight 370, according to
several news reports citing Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott.
Abbott told Parliament that "new and credible information has come to
light" related to the search, though the objects had yet to be
identified, according to Reuters. Abbott said a Royal Australian
Airforce Orion plane has been sent to the area in question to attempt to
locate the objects, the Associated Press
reported, adding that the aircraft should arrive Thursday afternoon
local time. The passenger plane disappeared on March 8, with 239 people
aboard.
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Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Saturday that the
movements of a missing plane were consistent with a deliberate act by
someone who turned the jet back across Malaysia and onwards to the west.
Investigators had confirmed that an aircraft tracked by military
radar was the lost Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, after its
communications were likely switched off before it reached the east coast
of Malaysia a week ago, Mr Najib told a news conference. "Despite media
reports the plane was hijacked, I wish to be very clear, we are still
investigating all possibilities as to what caused MH370 to deviate"
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Analysis of electronic pulses picked up from a missing Malaysian
airliner shows it could have run out of fuel and crashed into the Indian
Ocean after it flew hundreds of miles off course, a source familiar
with official US assessments said on Friday.
The source, who is familiar with data the US government is receiving
from the investigation into the disappearance of the Malaysia Airlines
plane, said the other, but less likely possibility, was that it flew on
toward India.
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Planes searching an area where Chinese satellites spotted possible
debris from a missing Malaysian passenger jet have found no sign of
wreckage, officials said Thursday, dimming hopes of a breakthrough in
the mystery.
China said late Wednesday its satellites had detected three large
floating objects in a suspected crash site near where the Malaysia
Airlines plane, which disappeared Saturday on a flight from Kuala Lumpur
to Beijing with 239 people on board, lost contact.
But Vietnam said Thursday that two of its planes dispatched to the area had found no trace of the airliner.
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Shares of Malaysian Airline System (MAS) dived on Monday hitting a
record low after a Boeing 777 operated by the airline went missing over
the weekend.
After dropping almost 18 per cent at the open, shares of the national
airline regained some ground to 22.5 sen per share at 0103 GMT.
MAS posted a net loss of 1.17 billion ringgit (US$359.12 million) in
2013 and could face damage to its reputation and a loss in bookings due
to the missing airline, despite the carrier’s good safety record.
MAS, which counts state investor Khazanah as one of its major
shareholders, is Malaysia’s second largest airline by market value,
trailing only budget carrier AirAsia.
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Navy confirms flight MH370 crashed into the sea.Our thoughts and prayers are with all affected passengers and crew and their family members.
Vietnam launched a search effort Saturday after it said a Malaysia
Airlines jet carrying 239 people lost contact with traffic controllers
near its airspace, as fears mounted over the plane's fate.
Regional authorities still could not locate Flight MH370 nearly 12
hours after it lost contact with air traffic control on an overnight
flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
The airline has said the plane relayed no distress signal or other indications of trouble.
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