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Malaysia's missing MH370 airplane: What we know, 10 years on

The disappearance ten years ago of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 with 239 individuals on board stays one of the world's biggest aviation mysteries.

The Boeing 777 went missing on its method from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014.

Satellite data analysis revealed the plane likely crashed somewhere in the southern Indian Ocean, off the coast of western Australia. Nevertheless, 2 significant searches stopped working to come up with any significant findings.

Here are some information of the look for MH370 and the unresolved secret of what occurred:

WHAT IS KNOWN?

The last transmission from the plane was about 40 minutes after it took off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing.

Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah signed off with Good night, Malaysian 3 7 no, as the aircraft entered Vietnamese air space.

Shortly afterwards, its transponder was shut off, which implied it might not be easily tracked.

Military radar showed the plane left its flight path to fly back over northern Malaysia and Penang island, and then out into the Andaman Sea towards the suggestion of the Indonesian island of Sumatra. It then turned south and all contact was lost.

UNDERSEA SEARCHES

Malaysia, Australia and China introduced an underwater search in a 120,000 sq km (46,332 sq miles) location in the southern Indian Ocean, based on information of automated connections in between an Inmarsat satellite and the airplane.

The search, which cost about A$ 200 million ($ 143 million),. was called off after 2 years in January 2017 with no traces of. the aircraft found.

In 2018, Malaysia accepted a no-cure, no-fee offer from. U.S. expedition company Ocean Infinity for a three-month search,. implying the company would only get paid if it found the aircraft.

That search covered 112,000 sq km (43,243 square miles). north of the original target area and likewise proved fruitless,. ending in May 2018.

PARTICLES

More than 30 pieces of thought airplane particles have been. collected along the along the coast of Africa and on islands in. the Indian Ocean, however only three wing fragments were confirmed. to be from MH370.

Most of the particles were used in drift pattern analysis in. the hopes of limiting the aircraft's possible location.

EXAMINATION REPORT

A 495-page report into MH370's disappearance, published in. July 2018, said the Boeing 777's controls were likely. intentionally controlled to take it off course, but. investigators could not determine who was accountable.

The report likewise highlighted mistakes made by the Kuala. Lumpur and Ho Chi Minh City air traffic control centres and. provided recommendations to prevent a repeat event.

Private investigators stopped short of offering any conclusions. about what took place to MH370, saying that depended on finding. the airplane's wreckage.

CONSPIRACY THEORIES

The failure to locate MH370's crash site has sustained. numerous conspiracy theories, varying from mechanical error or a. remote-controlled crash, to more strange descriptions like alien. kidnapping and a Russian plot.

Recently, some air travel specialists have said one of the most. most likely explanation was that the plane was deliberately removed. course by a knowledgeable pilot. Investigators, however, have. said there was absolutely nothing suspicious in the background, monetary. affairs, training and mental health of both the captain and. co-pilot.

RESUMPTION OF SEARCH

Malaysia's transportation minister announced on Friday the. government had actually concurred in principle to

resume the search

for the wreckage following a new proposal from Ocean. Infinity, which would receive $70 million if substantive. wreckage is discovered.

The new search, when a contract is signed, would expand. the previous search location by 15,000 sq km, the minister said. The. contract would cover 18 months and the firm had actually shown the. best time for the search would be in between January and April.

(source: Reuters)