Montreal Gazette

FLIGHT 370 SEARCH EXPANDED

France to scour Reunion Island

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KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA A French search plane lifted off Friday for a bird’s- eye view of tiny Reunion Island, seeking more potential debris from missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.

French authoritie­s said Friday they’ve launched a one- week- long operation with boats and aircraft scouring the Indian Ocean island, where a wing fragment was discovered nine days ago. Malaysian officials say it came from the missing Boeing 777 but investigat­ors from other countries have been more cautious.

The prefect of the French overseas department, Dominique Sorain, said the search would cover an area 120 by 40 kilometres around the island’s east coast, where the two- metre- long wing fragment was found.

Sorain said other objects found on the island’s beaches since last week have been removed for examinatio­n, but he said officials “don’t know” if these belong to a plane.

There remained a difference of opinion between Malaysian officials and those in France, the U. S. and Australia over whether the wing part, known as a flaperon, was definitely from Flight 370.

In Beijing, about 30 Chinese relatives of Flight 370 passengers marched Friday to the Malaysian Embassy hoping to talk to an official about why Malaysia had confirmed the part came from the plane when French investigat­ors had not. They scuffled briefly with police, who blocked the relatives from approachin­g the mission.

Some criticism came from within Malaysia itself. Opposition lawmaker Liew Chin Tong said Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai must explain his “haste and hurry” to declare the wreckage came from Flight 370. “A quick conclusion will not do justice to the next of kin of the victims,” he said.

An official in Prime Minister Najib Razak’s office said the government owes it to the public and the families to reveal what it knows and to deliver the news first.

“It is our plane and we know it best. Since the French is the investigat­ing team here, they do not want to take our word for it and they want to do more tests — that is fine with us,” the official said. “We are accustomed to criticism from day one, but please give us credit because we are doing our best to cope with this.”

Flight 370 and its 239 passengers and crew disappeare­d March 8, 2014, on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Officials believe it crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, killing all aboard, but the wreckage and the cause remain elusive despite a vast ongoing search led by Australia.

Malaysian officials have said the plane’s movements were consistent with deliberate actions by someone on the plane, suggesting someone in the cockpit intentiona­lly flew the aircraft off course.

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 ?? K E V I N F R AY E R / G E T T Y I MAG E S ?? A Chinese relative of a passenger missing on Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 scuffles with police Friday during a protest in Beijing. France has widened its search for debris off Reunion Island, where a wing part that Malaysia says is from the plane was...
K E V I N F R AY E R / G E T T Y I MAG E S A Chinese relative of a passenger missing on Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 scuffles with police Friday during a protest in Beijing. France has widened its search for debris off Reunion Island, where a wing part that Malaysia says is from the plane was...

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