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Families of passengers on flight MH370 urge Malaysia to extend its search

Families of those onboard Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 urged the Malaysian Government to extend a contract signed with Ocean Infinity, a deep-sea research firm, to continue the search for 'the aircraft that vanished a year ago.

The Boeing 777 was carrying 227 passengers, 12 crew members and was en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur on March 8, 2014. Its disappearance became one of the most enduring aviation mysteries in history.

Since then, multiple search operations have been conducted to find the plane in the southern Indian Ocean but have all proved unsuccessful.

Malaysia agreed in March of last year to allow Ocean Infinity?resume their hunt on the basis that if they failed to find the wreckage, the firm would not be charged. The company was only to receive $70 million if it found the wreckage.

Malaysia's Air Accident Investigation Bureau announced on Sunday that the two phases of search, which spanned 28 days, and covered 7,571 square kilometers (2,923 square miles) seabed, had so far not yielded any results.

The AAIB reported that weather and sea conditions periodically interrupted operations, with the second stage ending on January 23.

The government said that it will continue to update families as necessary.

Voice370, which represents families of those aboard, stated that it was unlikely Ocean Infinity would resume the search until its contract expires in June due to the upcoming winter months in the southern hemisphere, and the deteriorating conditions at sea.

The government was urged to grant any request by Ocean Infinity for an extension of its agreement and to expand the same terms on to other interested exploration companies.

It said that a simple?addendum would extend the contract term without changing the core terms of the agreement, allowing the search to proceed without delay.

Ocean Infinity conducted previous searches for the plane, but did not find any substantial wreckage.

In a report published in 2018, Malaysian investigators did not reach a conclusion on what had happened, but they didn't rule out that the plane could have been intentionally taken off course.

(source: Reuters)