New Straits Times

LEANING ON EACH OTHER TO CARRY ON

Families of victims meet about once a month to support one another

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FIVE years ago, their loved ones boarded a plane and vanished. The group of Malaysians meet about once a month — usually at a coffee shop or a home here — to support each other and try to keep missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 in the public eye.

Their relatives were among the 239 people on board the Boeing 777 when it vanished en route from here to Beijing on March 8, 2014 and became the world’s greatest aviation mystery.

Scraps of aircraft debris have washed up on the east African coastline, but two underwater searches in the southern Indian Ocean proved fruitless, leaving few clues as to what happened.

Starved for informatio­n and struggling to resume their lives, the families have come to lean on each other for support, said Jacquita Gonzales, whose husband Patrick Gomes was MH370’s inflight supervisor.

“It goes beyond a group waiting for answers,” said Gonzales, a 57year-old kindergart­en teacher who often hosts the group at her home on the outskirts of the capital.

“It has become a family as well, an extended family,” she said.

For five years, the group has campaigned to keep public attention on MH370 and help each other cope with their grief and try to live normal lives by returning to work, raising children and, in Gonzales’ case, battle illness.

She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2016 for the second time in her life, but it has since gone into remission.

“When I first had cancer, I had my husband for support,” she said.

“This second time, no. But I had a lot of family members around, my friends, my children, and now my MH370 families ,.. so that kept us going.”

In her living room hangs a painting of a blue-and-yellow field — a gift from Calvin Shim, another MH370 next-of-kin, to help her stay calm while recovering from surgery.

Shim, a father of two, said the group helped him to adjust to life as a single parent. His wife, Christine Tan, was a member of the MH370 crew.

“The other families know exactly how each of us feels,” he said during a meeting at Gonzales’ home.

“Emotionall­y, that’s been a good support and help to us, especially since the plane has not been found,” he added.

“We have not said goodbye.”

In early 2017, Malaysia, China and Australia called off a twoyear US$144 million search in the southern Indian Ocean after finding no trace of the plane.

A second three-month search north of the original target area, led by United States exploratio­n firm Ocean Infinity, ended similarly in May last year.

A 495-page report published in July said the Boeing 777 was likely deliberate­ly taken off course, but investigat­ors were unable to determine who was responsibl­e.

The government had said it would consider resuming a search if new evidence came to light.

Not knowing what happened in the aircraft’s final moments has made closure “impossible”, Gonzales said.

“When friends tell me that their spouses have passed away, I get very jealous because they have closure,” she said.

“They’ve said goodbye. But for us, we’ve not said goodbye at all.”

Emotionall­y, that’s been a good support and help to us, especially since the plane has not been found. We have not said goodbye.” CALVIN SHIM

MH370 next of kin

 ?? IBRAHIM PIX BY SALHANI ?? Family members of victims of Flight MH370 praying and engaging in activities during the ‘Day of Remembranc­e for MH370’ at The Square @ Publika in Kuala Lumpur last year.
IBRAHIM PIX BY SALHANI Family members of victims of Flight MH370 praying and engaging in activities during the ‘Day of Remembranc­e for MH370’ at The Square @ Publika in Kuala Lumpur last year.
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 ??  ?? Messages of hope posted on a wall during the ‘Day of Remembranc­e for MH370’ at The Square @ Publika in Kuala Lumpur last year.
Messages of hope posted on a wall during the ‘Day of Remembranc­e for MH370’ at The Square @ Publika in Kuala Lumpur last year.
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