Yahoo – AFP,
October 7, 2016
Sydney (AFP) - A piece of wing debris found in Mauritius is from MH370, Australian authorities said Friday as they cautioned the discovery shed no new light on the missing passenger jet's specific location.
A trailing edge section of Boeing 777 left, outboard flap, originating from the Malaysian Airlines aircraft registered 9M-MRO (MH370), the Australian Transport Safety Bureau said (AFP Photo) |
Sydney (AFP) - A piece of wing debris found in Mauritius is from MH370, Australian authorities said Friday as they cautioned the discovery shed no new light on the missing passenger jet's specific location.
The
composite debris, recovered from the island nation in May, is the latest
fragment found along western Indian Ocean shorelines linked to Malaysia
Airlines MH370.
The Boeing
777 disappeared en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014 carrying
239 passengers and crew.
Despite an
extensive underwater search in the southern Indian Ocean far off Western
Australia's coast where investigators believe the plane crashed, no trace of
the aircraft has been found there.
The wing
part "was a trailing edge section of Boeing 777 left, outboard flap,
originating from the Malaysian Airlines aircraft registered 9M-MRO
(MH370)", the government agency leading the search, the Australian
Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB), said in a report.
"A
part number was identified on a section of the debris," the ATSB said,
adding that another "unique work order number" assigned by the flap
manufacturer corresponded to MH370.
Australian
Transport Minister Darren Chester said investigators "remain hopeful"
MH370 would be found.
"The
finding of this debris... continues to affirm the focus of search efforts in
the southern Indian Ocean," Chester said in a statement.
A large
piece of debris found in Tanzania that has been confirmed as a
part of a wing
flap from missing Malaysia Airlines passenger jet MH370
(AFP Photo)
|
"It
does not, however, provide information that can be used to determine a specific
location of the aircraft."
The ATSB
report came two weeks after the agency said officials had yet to link debris
recovered from Madagascar by US amateur investigator Blaine Gibson to MH370 or
a Boeing 777.
Officials
also said the debris found in Madagascar was not exposed to fire, quashing
earlier speculation.
The failure
to locate any debris in the search zone has fuelled speculation the plane may
have crashed outside the area.
Several
pieces of debris linked to the flight have been discovered along western Indian
Ocean shorelines -- in Mozambique, South Africa and Mauritius.
The
Mauritius part is the third fragment to be confirmed as coming from MH370.
Malaysia said in mid-September that debris found in June off Tanzania came from
the doomed airliner.
The first
piece found -- a two-metre (six-foot) wing part known as a flaperon that washed
up on the French Indian Ocean island of Reunion in July 2015 -- was confirmed
by French authorities as from MH370.
More than
110,000 square kilometres of the search area has been scoured so far, Australia
said this week, adding that the hunt was set to be completed in December.
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