SATELLITE ZA AUSTRALIA YAONESHA KITU KINACHOSADIKIWA NI MABAKI YA NDEGE YA MALAYSIA
Australia
is investigating two objects seen on satellite images that could
potentially be linked to the missing Malaysia Airlines plane, officials
say.lanes
and ships from Australia, New Zealand and the US were heading to the
area 2,500km (1,550 miles) south-west of Perth to search for the
objects.The largest appeared to be 24m in size, maritime authorities said, but warned they could be unrelated to the plane.Australia has been searching in the southern Indian Ocean for the aircraft.Malaysia
Airlines flight MH370 was flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on 8
March when it lost contact with air traffic controllers. A total of 239
people were on board.Twenty-six nations have been involved in a major search for the missing plane, which Malaysia says was intentionally diverted.
Investigators
have been scrutinising the backgrounds of both the crew and the
passengers, but have so far identified no evidence of terror or other
potentially relevant links.
A number
of sightings of possible debris have been investigated in the course of
the search but so far none have proved to be linked.
Southern corridor
Prime Minister Tony Abbott announced the discovery of the objects in parliament.
"The
Australian Maritime Safety Authority (Amsa) has received information
based on satellite information of objects possibly related to the
search," Mr Abbott said.
"Following specialist analysis of this satellite imagery, two possible objects related to the search have been identified."
An
Australian Orion aircraft is currently in the search area and three more
planes, including US and New Zealand aircraft, are on their way. A
merchant ship is due there later in the day and an Australian naval
vessel, HMAS Success, is also on its way.
Amsa said the debris had been located in waters some 2,500km south-west of the Australian city of Perth.
The
objects identified were of a "reasonable size", Amsa's general manager
John Young said. The largest object appeared to be about 24m in size, he
said.
"The
objects are relatively indistinct. The indication to me is of objects
that are of a reasonable size and probably awash with water and bobbing
up and down over the surface," he said.
"This is a
lead, it is probably the best lead we have right now. But we need to
get there, find them, see them, assess them, to know whether it's really
meaningful or not."
He warned that poor visibility in the area could hamper the search.
Australia informed Malaysian authorities of the development on Thursday morning.
"We have
been following every single lead and this time I just hope that this
time it is a positive development," Malaysia's Acting Transport Minister
Hishammuddin Hussein said.
Satellite signal
Earlier this week, Australia was asked by Malaysia to take responsibility for the "southern corridor" search.
Investigators
had identified two corridors of territory - one to the north and one to
the south - spanning the possible positions of the plane about seven
hours after take-off.
This was
based on its last faint signal to a satellite - an hourly "handshake''
broadcast even when the main communication systems are switched off.
The plane lost contact with controllers over the South China Sea as it crossed from Malaysian to Vietnamese air space.
Malaysian
officials say it then turned west and its last position - according to
Malaysian military radar - was over the Malacca Straits, in the opposite
direction to its planned flight path.
Attention
has focused on the crew and on Wednesday multiple unidentified US
officials said that the FBI was helping Malaysia analyse data from a
flight simulator taken from the captain's home.
Hishammuddin
Hussein, at a press conference on Wednesday, stressed the captain
should be considered innocent until proved otherwise and said that
members of his family were co-operating with the investigation.
Hakuna maoni:
Chapisha Maoni