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Missing plane:positive announcement could be made within hours'

    • 51 posts
    April 7, 2014 7:15 PM IST

    LONDON: Malaysia's defence minister is "cautiously hopeful" that teams searching for missing Flight MH370 will be able to make a positive announcement in the next few days, "if not hours". Hishamuddin Hussein have a statement to reporters at a press conference on Monday in light of underwater "pings" that were detected by ships searching the southern Indian Ocean.

    His comments came after the head of the Australian agency coordinating the search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 said the team is "very close" to locating the area where the aircraft fell, after a US navy ping locator towed by an Australian ship detected signals consistent with the beacons emitted from aircraft black box recorders.

    However, authorities have warned it will take time to confirm whether the sounds are signals from the flight data recorders that belonged to the missing aircraft.

    Angus Houston, a former Australian defence chief and head of the Australian search, told a news conference in Perth on Monday that this was the most promising lead yet in the monthlong hunt for the aeroplane.

    Australia's Ocean Shield picked up the signals in an area 1,680km (1,040 miles) northwest of Perth, which analysis of sporadic satellite data has showed is the most likely place Boeing 777 went down.

    Houston told reporters that he is "much more optimistic than I was a week ago."

    The first "ping" signal detection was held for more than two hours before the Ocean Shield lost contact, but the ship was able to pick up a signal aground 13 minutes, Houston said.

    "We are encouraged that we are very close to where we need to be," he said according to Telegraph.

    "On this occasion two distinct pinger returns were audible. Significantly, this would be consistent with transmissions from both the flight data recorder and the cockpit voice recorder," he said.

    "In the search so far it is probably the best information we have had. We are trying to fix the position on the basis of the transmissions.

    "We are now in a very well defined search area, which hopefully will eventually yield the information that we need to say that MH370 might have entered the water just here."

    Despite his positivity, Houston cautioned that the wreckage was still lost.

    "I would want more information before we say 'this is it'."

    "We are right on the edge of capability and we might be limited on capability if the aircraft ended up in deeper water. In very deep oceanic water, nothing happens fast," said Houston.

    "This is not the end of the search. We still have got difficult, painstaking work to do to confirm that this is indeed where the aircraft entered the water."

    He added that if the signals can be narrowed further, Bluefin 21, an autonomous underwater vehicle, can be used to try to locate wreckage on the sea floor and confirm whether the signals are from the aircraft's flight recorders.

    • 19 posts
    April 12, 2014 1:49 PM IST

    good

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