The Citizen (KZN)

MH370 search scaled down

- Sydney

– The official search for MH370 in the Indian Ocean has been reduced to one ship, Australian authoritie­s said yesterday as relatives of the missing passengers launch their own hunt for crash debris in Madagascar.

The Fugro Equator, one of four vessels involved in the search, remains in the 120 000km² zone where investigat­ors believe the Malaysian Airlines jet went down.

The ships, three of which were contracted from Dutch firm Fugro, had been scouring the southern Indian Ocean off Western Australia state for the Boeing 777.

China’s Dong Hai Jiu 101, which was hunting for debris with a remotely operated vehicle – a device tethered to a ship by a cable – departed on Saturday, the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) said.

The plane disappeare­d en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, carrying 239 passengers and crew.

No trace of the missing jet has been found, but investigat­ors have confirmed that three pieces of debris recovered along western Indian Ocean shorelines came from MH370.

With more than 110 000km² already examined, the Fugro Equator’s mission was expected to wrap up by February next year, the ATSB said in a statement.

The news came after families from Malaysia, China and France gathered in Madagascar’s capital, Antananari­vo, on Monday as frustratio­n grew over the failure to find the aircraft. The relatives were set to distribute brochures educating villagers on how to identify plane debris.

Many next of kin have repeatedly complained about the lack of a coordinate­d search in the western Indian Ocean and along the African coast. – AFP

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