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Rediff.com  » News » 'Highly unlikely' that MH370 will be found on ocean surface: Abbott

'Highly unlikely' that MH370 will be found on ocean surface: Abbott

Source: PTI
April 28, 2014 14:05 IST
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Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Monday said it was now "highly unlikely" that any debris of the missing Malaysia Airlines plane will be found on the ocean surface, as he announced a more intensive underwater search expanding to new areas that may take up to eight months. Describing the hunt as "probably the most difficult search in human history", Abbott said the search for the missing flight MH370 will be entering a new phase that will use private contractors and may cost about $60 million.

"I regret to say that thus far none of our efforts in the air, on the surface or under sea, have found any wreckage," he said in Canberra. "By this stage, 52 days into the search, most material would have become water-logged and sunk," he said, adding that it is now "highly unlikely" that any debris will be located on the ocean surface.

"We are moving from the current phase to a phase which is focused on searching the ocean floor over a much larger area," Abbott said.The new phase will focus on searching the ocean floor over a much larger area -- 60,000 square kilometers, a process that will take about six to eight months. "While the search will be moving to a new phase in coming weeks, it certainly is not ending," he said, adding Australia will continue to do what it can to find the missing plane.

The Beijing-bound Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 flight MH370 -- carrying 239 people, including five Indians, an Indo-Canadian and 154 Chinese nationals - had mysteriously vanished on March 8 after taking off from Kuala Lumpur. The mystery of the missing plane continued to baffle aviation and security authorities who have so far not ucceeded in tracking the aircraft despite deploying hi-tech radar and other  gadgets.

Meanwhile, a remote-controlled mini-submarine deployed in the southern Indian Ocean to find the missing plane on Monday launched its 16th mission with still no sign of wreckage. Autonomous underwater vehicle Bluefin 21, a US navy probe equipped with side-scan sonar which is scouring the ocean floor for traces of the plane, has completed mission 15 and was now on its next mission 16, the Perth-based Joint Agency Coordination Centre said in a statement.

Bluefin 21 has focused the search on an area in the southern Indian Ocean where four acoustic signals were detected that led authorities to believe that the plane's black box may be located there. Search coordinator Air Chief Marshal (retd.) Angus Houston said he is confident searchers are looking in the "right area", but admitted there could be months of searching ahead using new side scanner sonar equipment.

"It will take time," he added.  "I'd invite you all to just have a look at the French experience with their flight 447. It took them two years to find the final resting place of that aircraft. "We are getting into a very challenging task, as the prime minister said, probably the most demanding task in search terms that has ever been mounted to look for a lost aircraft," Houston added.

Abbott said Australia would seek some appropriate contributions from other nations involved in the search. "We still have a considerable degree of confidence that the detections that were picked up using the equipment deployed from Ocean Shield were from a black box recorder. We are still baffled and disappointed that we haven't been able to find undersea wreckage based on those detections," he said.

Meanwhile in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim said there is a major security problem if the government claims it cannot detect the plane despite the sophisticated Marconi radar. He said the Malaysian government had not released the cargo manifest of the plane except to say it had four tonnes of mangosteen fruit which, he claimed, could not be bought off season.

The Marconi radar "is a very sophisticated radar at Gong Kedah (the air force facility in northern Malaysia). It can read from the border of Thailand to central Malaya, South China Sea and Indian Ocean," Anwar said, pointing out the jet had crossed five provinces before it vanished.

"We have major security problems if the government says it cannot detect," Anwar said, accusing the government of "concealing and cover-up." “It's very difficult to understand what happened when there was a huge cover-up," he added.

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