Wednesday, February 24, 2016

MH370 search expected to resume, subject to weather conditions

One of the vessels tasked with searching for wreckage of Flight MH370 is expected to resume operations tomorrow after experiencing difficulties with the reinstallation of its towed sonar vehicle "towfish". In a statement today, the Australian Government's Joint Agency Coordination Centre said the Fugro Discovery which departed Port Fremantle after a thorough inspection would join the Fugro Equator and Havila Harmony at the search area. The towfish was reported to have been lost after striking a 2,200m high mud volcano on January 25. As a result, the towfish's cable broke and sent the vehicle and its 4.5km of cable to the ocean floor. It was then recovered by Havila Harmony and a new cable was fitted to the Fugro Discovery. The agency said another vessel, Dong Hai Jiu 101, was expected to arrive at the search area tomorrow, after departing Port Fremantle. More than 85,000 sq km of the 120,000 sq km of the search area had been covered so far, it added. The MAS aircraft with 239 passengers and crew on board disappeared from the radar screen while en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur on the morning of March 8, 2014. The final flight path of the doomed aircraft is believed to have ended in the southern Indian Ocean. – Bernama, February 24, 2016.]]>

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