Uncategorised

Relatives want new MH370 search plan

01 Jun, 2014 - 00:06 0 Views
Relatives want new MH370 search plan

The Sunday News

mh370Beijing — Their hopes raised and dashed, relatives of passengers on a missing Malaysia Airlines plane want a new plan to find it after the search was suspended following a new setback.The 84-year-old mother of Australian passenger Rod Burrows no longer expects to live to see the mystery of Flight 370 solved.

“I doubt it will be in my lifetime,” Irene Burrows said on Friday from her home in Biloela in Australia’s northeast. “All I just want is a bit of plane. It’s all I want to know — where they are.”

Tempers flared on Thursday after the joint centre set up to oversee the search for the jet that vanished on 8 March said a robot submarine had found no trace of it in a section of the southern Indian Ocean where acoustic signals, or “pings,” were detected.

Investigators have concluded that the area where the signals were detected is not the final resting place of the plane.

The search for the plane and the 239 people on board will be suspended for two months while more powerful sonar equipment is brought in, according to the Australia-based Joint Agency Co-ordination Centre.

“Now they say the pings are not from the plane. It’s 8 March all over again and I don’t like 8 March at all,” said an emotional Jacquita Gonzales, whose husband Patrick Gomes was the flight supervisor.

“We are on a roller coaster ride and we have just hit bottom again,” she said.

Gonzales said sometimes she is an “emotional wreck” thinking about the fate of her beloved husband but wills herself to be strong. Their 29th wedding anniversary is on today.

“Please find the plane, find my husband and all our loved ones,” she said.

Authorities believe the plane, bound from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, turned sharply and flew to the southern Indian Ocean. Yet not a single piece of the missing Boeing 777 has been found.

The Malaysian official in charge of the search, Defence Minister Hishamuddin Hussein, visited Beijing this week, and relatives asked to meet him but got no reply, said Steve Wang, whose mother was on the plane.

“Something very disappointing has been announced and we want to know what his plan is,” Wang said.

This week, the Malaysian government gave in to pressure from families of passengers and released 45 pages of satellite data it used to determine that the flight ended in the southern Indian Ocean. — AP.

Share This:

Survey


We value your opinion! Take a moment to complete our survey

This will close in 20 seconds