The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Australia, Malaysia hope jet will be found

239 people aboard flight that went missing 3 years ago.

- By Rod McGuirk

CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA — The Australian government minister in charge of the suspended seabed search for the Malaysia Airlines jet told victims’ families and friends at an anniversar­y church service on Wednesday that he remained hopeful Flight 370 would be found.

“While to date we have been unsuccessf­ul, we remain hopeful that at some stage in the future, there will be a breakthrou­gh, the aircraft will be found, and we will be able to answer more of your questions,” said Darren Chester, minister for infrastruc­ture and transport.

The Malaysian government said that although Australia, Malaysia and China in January suspended the sonar search for the airliner after a sweep of 46,000 square miles of the Indian Ocean, “we remain ever hopeful that we will be able to find the answers we seek when the credible evidence becomes available.”

Chester and Angus Houston, the former Australian defense chief who coordinate­d the early months of the search efforts, were among around 100 who attended the private ceremony at St. John’s Anglican Cathedral in the east city of Brisbane, Australia, to mark the third anniversar­y of the mysterious tragedy.

Several victims and relatives of the 239 passengers and crew aboard the Boeing 777, which flew far off course during a flight from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing on March 8, 2014, live in or near Brisbane.

Chester told the congregati­on that included families of New Zealand victim Paul Weeks, and Australian­s Robert and Catherine Lawton and Rodney and Mary Burrows that searchers had tried their best to end the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the crash. He also said that a memorial to the lost passengers and crew would be erected in the Australian west coast city of Perth, which had been a base for Indian Ocean air and sea search crews.

Chester said before the service that he understood the frustratio­n many would feel on the anniversar­y of the tragedy, that there was no longer an active search for the crash site.

Jeanette Maguire, sister of passenger Catherine Lawton, said the relatives appreciate­d that the Australian government had invited them to such a memorial service.

“The government didn’t have to do that and it was very special that they wanted to do something to ensure our families didn’t feel forgotten,” Maguire said.

Chester declined to comment on a suggestion by some relatives of raising funds to continue a private search of the ocean floor.

“I’m not going to offer advice to those who want to fundraise privately to extend the search, but from the Australian­s government’s perspectiv­e, the search remains suspended,” Chester said.

Australia’s prime minister at the time of the tragedy, Tony Abbott, said in a newspaper interview last month that areas north and south of the searched zone should also be examined.

“When you’ve got nearly 240 people missing, the greatest mystery of modern times, as long as there is any reasonable prospectiv­e place to search, you just keep searching,” Abbott told News Corp. Australia.

Abbott, who remains a lawmaker, said the most plausible scenario was that a pilot had deliberate­ly crashed the plane. A pilot could have flown the plane further south than the area searched, Abbott said.

A lawsuit filed in the United States on behalf of the families of 44 people on board Flight 370 alleges a series of catastroph­ic electrical and other failures may have led to the crash.

The lawsuit, filed Friday against Boeing in U.S. District Court in South Carolina, names seven malfunctio­ns, from an electrical fire to depressuri­zation of the plane’s cabin, that could have led to the crew losing consciousn­ess, the plane’s transponde­r stopping its transmissi­on and the plane flying undetected until it crashed after running out of fuel.

 ?? ROB GRIFFITH / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2014 ?? The shadow of a Royal New Zealand Air Force P3 Orion is seen on low-level cloud while the aircraft searches for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 in the southern Indian Ocean, near the coast of Western Australia, in 2014.
ROB GRIFFITH / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2014 The shadow of a Royal New Zealand Air Force P3 Orion is seen on low-level cloud while the aircraft searches for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 in the southern Indian Ocean, near the coast of Western Australia, in 2014.
 ?? NG HAN GUAN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dai Shuqin, whose younger sister and her family were on board the missing flight, reacts as a policeman gives directions Wednesday near the Foreign Ministry in Beijing, China.
NG HAN GUAN / ASSOCIATED PRESS Dai Shuqin, whose younger sister and her family were on board the missing flight, reacts as a policeman gives directions Wednesday near the Foreign Ministry in Beijing, China.

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