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MH370: Four-year hunt ends after private search is completed

- - BBC

The four-year hunt for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 has ended with the latest, privately funded search coming to a close.

US-based Ocean Infinity had been using a deep-sea vessel to survey a vast area of the southern Indian Ocean.

But it found nothing and Malaysia's government says it has no plans to begin any new searches.

The plane disappeare­d on 8 March 2014 while flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board.

Official search efforts ended last year and there are still fierce debates about what happened to the flight.

8 March 2014: Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 departs for Beijing. The plane loses contact less than an hour after take-off, with no distress signal or message sent. Initial search efforts focus on the South China Sea

15 March 2015: After evidence emerges that the plane was diverted to the south, the focus switches to the Indian Ocean

July 2015: Large piece of debris washes ashore on Reunion, an island in the Indian Ocean east of Madagascar

January 2017: The government­s of Australia, Malaysia and China announce they are suspending the official search after failing to find anything in the area thought to be the plane's final resting place

January 2018: Amid pressure from relatives, Malaysia signs a deal with a private company to resume the hunt.

Ocean Infinity agree to work unpaid but would have received a reward of up to $70m if it had found the wreckage

May 2018: Deteriorat­ing weather makes operating in the area impossible, bringing the hunt to an end.

Malaysia says it has no plans to restart it Some items of debris have been found along the east

African coast

There is still no answer. Experts still cannot come to Finding the plane, or at least a definitive conclusion as to more bits of its wreckage, could whether MH370 remained under prove key but investigat­ors have the pilot's command, or crashed very limited informatio­n about out of control into the sea. the plane's last hours. One widely explored theory is that the plane's pilot deliberate­ly brought it down.

But Australian investigat­ors have rejected this, saying he was unconsciou­s during the final moments.

Technical failure remains another possibilit­y but in the absence of an official explanatio­n conspiracy theories have abounded.

Malaysian Transport Minister Anthony Loke says a full report into the plane's disappeara­nce will be published in the future but has not given a date.

Australia, Malaysia and China have agreed that an official search would resume only if credible evidence emerged on the plane's location.

Although the Malaysian government says it will not extend the private search, Anwar Ibrahim, who is widely tipped as next prime minister, told The Australian newspaper there was "further digging" to be done.

In the long-term, a project to map the ocean floor may also offer answers.

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