Chinese vessel with advanced sonar to join MH370 search
China will join the search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 by sending a sonar vessel to the search area in the southern Indian Ocean, Australia's Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss said on Friday.
Flight MH370 disappeared with 239 people on board during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in March 2014, sparking one of the greatest mysteries in aviation history.
The Chinese vessel Dong Hai Jiu 101 was offered to Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull in November and will be deployed to join search operations in the southern Indian Ocean, where the plane is believed to have gone down, Truss said.
At the time, China valued its contribution to the search at $14.2 million.
The Australian-led underwater search is one of the most expensive ever conducted. An initial hunt along a rugged 60,000-square-kilometer patch of sea floor off the coast of Perth cost $85 million but yielded no sign of the plane.
The presence of Dong Hai Jiu 101 will take to four the number of vessels scouring a search area that has been expanded to 120,000 square km of ocean floor.
The vessel is expected to leave Singapore for Australia on Monday and commence operations toward the end of February.
Earlier this week, Australian authorities said they had lost a deep-water sonar detector that was being used in the search.
A piece of the plane washed up on the French island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean in July 2015 but no further trace has been found.
On Saturday, a piece of suspected plane wreckage was found off the east coast of southern Thailand but aviation experts and Thai officials said it was unlikely to belong to MH370.
Reuters - Xinhua