Hawke's Bay Today

Search costs still to be agreed on

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Australia

Countries searching for the missing Malaysian plane had yet to agree on how to share costs, an Australian search leader said yesterday.

Malaysian officials were in the Australian capital Canberra to discuss the next phase of the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 that is thought to have crashed in the Indian Ocean on March 8 with 239 passengers and crew on board.

Malaysia is in charge of the search because the Boeing 777 is registered in that country. But Australia is co-ordinating the search because it is the closest country to where the plane is thought to have crashed.

Most of the passengers were Chinese and their Government is playing an active role in the search.

“We’re still to negotiate the burden-sharing with Malaysia,” Australia’s Joint Agency Coordinati­on Centre head Angus Houston said.

A seabed search of the most likely crash site, using an unmanned remote controlled submarine, ended last month without finding any trace of the plane.

Australia is contractin­g private operators to embark on a much larger search using powerful sonar equipment. The new search is expected to take more than eight months.

Canberra expects to spend A$90 million ($100 million) on the search by July 2015. — AP

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