Investigators
may have hit a dead end in
their quest to say with certainty whether a
piece of airplane debris found in the Indian Ocean comes from a
Malaysian passenger jet that disappeared mysteriously in 2014.
The Malaysian Prime Minister said a few weeks ago that the debris clearly is from MH370, which disappeared with 239 people aboard
in March 2014. Investigators in France said there were "very strong
presumptions" that the debris, called a flaperon, was from MH370, but
that further testing was needed to say that with ironclad confidence,.
Now
comes word that a Spanish company has told French investigators that it
cannot tell with certainty from consulting its records whether the
flaperon found on Reunion Island came from MH370, a French source close
to the investigation told CNN. The flaperon is from a Boeing 777 -- and
MH370 was a Boeing 777, the only one in the world that's unaccounted for
-- but the company can't say with absolute certainty that the flaperon
found on Reunion Island comes from the missing plane, the source said.
The
Spanish company manufactured part of the flaperon. Investigators had
hoped to match a number found on the debris from Reunion Island with
records from the Spanish company -- to confirm that the debris did, in
fact, come from MH370 -- but that proved impossible.
The
development on Monday does not mean that the debris found on Reunion
isn't from the missing plane -- it just means that investigators cannot
yet make the link with 100% certainty.
But even the slightest possibility that the debris might not be from the missing plane adds to what so far ranks among aviation's greatest mysteries.
In
the early hours of March 8, 2014, Flight 370 took off from Kuala Lumpur
International Airport in Malaysia en route to Beijing, with 239 passengers and crew on board.
At
1:19 a.m., as the Boeing 777-200ER was flying over the South China Sea,
Malaysian air traffic controllers radioed the crew to contact
controllers in Ho Chi Minh City for the onward flight through Vietnamese
airspace.
The crew's acknowledgment of the request was the last thing ever heard from MH370: "Good night Malaysian three-seven-zero."
Shortly
afterward, air traffic controllers in Malaysia lost contact with the
plane somewhere over the sea between Malaysia and Vietnam.
The
aircraft's transponder, which identifies the plane and relays details
like altitude and speed to controllers, stopped transmitting. MH370
seemingly disappeared without a trace.
Malaysian
authorities revealed later that military radar had tracked the plane as
it turned back to the west and flew across the Malaysian Peninsula, up
the Strait of Malacca, before flying out of radar range at 2.14 a.m. and
vanishing once again.
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