Debris might be from missing plane
WASHINGTON — Air safety investigators have a “high degree of confidence” that a photo of aircraft debris found in the Indian Ocean is of a wing component unique to the Boeing 777, the same model as the Malaysia Airlines plane that disappeared last year, a U.S. official said Wednesday.
Air safety investigators — one of them a Boeing investigator — have identified the component as a flaperon from the trailing edge of a 777 wing, the U.S. official said.
A French official close to an investigation of the debris confirmed Wednesday that French law enforcement is on site to examine a piece of airplane wing found on the French island of Reunion, in the western Indian Ocean. A French television network was airing video from its Reunion affiliate of the debris.
The U.S. and French officials spoke on condition they not be named because they aren’t authorized to speak publicly.
At the United Nations, Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai told reporters he has sent a team to verify the identity of the plane wreckage.
“Whatever wreckage found needs to be further verified before we can ever confirm that it is belonged to MH370,” he said.
If the debris turns out to be from Malaysia Airlines flight 370, it will be the first major break in the effort to discover what happened to the plane after it vanished March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board while travelling from Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia to Beijing. A massive multinational search of the South Indian Ocean, the China Sea and the Gulf of Thailand came up dry.
A comprehensive report earlier this year into the plane’s disappearance revealed the battery of the locator beacon for the plane’s flight data recorder had expired more than a year before the jet vanished. However, the report said the battery in the locator beacon of the cockpit voice recorder was working.
Investigators hope if they can locate the two recorders they can get to the bottom of what has become one of aviation’s biggest mysteries. The unsuccessful search for Flight 370 has raised concern worldwide about whether airliners should be required to transmit their locations continually via satellite, especially when flying long distances over the ocean.
Apart from the anomaly of the expired battery, the detailed report devoted page after page to describing a flight that started off completely normal.
In Canberra, Martin Dolan, Australia’s transport safety bureau chief commissioner, said the seabed search for the missing aircraft is unlikely to be altered.
He said searchers’ drift modelling indicated that debris could have floated to the island from where they believed the missing plane crashed 1,800 kilometres southwest of Australia.
“It doesn’t rule out our current search area if this were associated with MH370,” Dolan said. “It is entirely possible that something could have drifted from our current search area to that island.”