Two pieces of debris found in Mozambique are “almost certainly from MH370”, Australia said today, after technical analysis provided the latest clue to the fate of the missing Malaysia Airlines aircraft.
Until the latest discoveries, only a wing part recovered from a beach on the Indian Ocean island of Reunion which lies to the east of Mozambique had been confirmed as coming from the plane which disappeared two years ago.
“The analysis has concluded the debris is almost certainly from MH370,” Transport Minister Darren Chester said, adding that Malaysian investigators had found the pieces were consistent with panels from a Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 aircraft.
“That such debris have been found on the east coast of Africa is consistent with drift modelling performed by (national science body) CSIRO and further affirms our search efforts in the southern Indian Ocean.”
The two pieces are a flat grey fragment with the words “No Step” printed along one side, found on a sandbank, and a metre-long piece of metal picked up by a holidaymaker.
Australia is leading the search for MH370 in the remote Indian Ocean, where the Kuala Lumpur-Beijing flight is believed to have diverted when it disappeared on March 8, 2014 carrying 239 passengers and crew.
Another piece of debris yet to be identified as coming from the missing jet was picked up near Mossel Bay, a small town in Western Cape province, South African authorities said Tuesday. They did not reveal when it was found.
Malaysia is working with South African officials to arrange for the examination of the fragment, which Australia’s Joint Agency Coordination Centre (JACC) said yesterday was “suspected to be the cowling from an engine”.
Mossel Bay lies more than 2,000 km (1,250 miles) from Vilankulo, the Mozambican resort where one of the pieces being examined in Australia was found.
Specialists, including from Australia and Boeing, have been conducting investigations in Canberra alongside the Malaysia team on the two items after they were found in Mozambique.
When a two-metre-long (almost seven-foot) flaperon part washed up on a beach on the French overseas territory of La Reunion in July, it was the first concrete evidence that MH370 met a tragic end.
The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB), the agency leading the search, had said then that its location was consistent with drift modelling of where debris might have floated.
Chester said the hunt for the crash site, far off Australia’s southwest coast, would continue.
“There are 25,000 square kilometres of the underwater search area still to be searched. We are focused on completing this task and remain hopeful the aircraft will be found,” he said.