Mystery of missing MH370 deepens after update in underwater search | News World

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Investigators have released an update on the large seabed seek for MH370.

Greater than 7,500 square kilometres of ocean was surveyed in January for the missing Boeing 777 jet, which disappeared greater than ten years ago.

All 239 passengers and crew are presumed dead after the Malaysian Airlines plane vanished from radar in March 2014.

Previous efforts to scour the seabed of the Indian Ocean, which reaches depths of 24,442 feet, had didn’t locate the wreckage.

But hopes were raised after Malaysia’s transport ministry confirmed the search would resume again in targeted areas at the beginning of this 12 months.

Marine robotics firm Ocean Infinity conducted the lates huge underwater search on a ‘no find, no fee’ basis.

In a serious update to families today, the Malaysian Government confirmed that the large operation took place over 28 days from December 31, 2025 and concluded on January 28, 2026.

Nevertheless the extensive search within the southern Indian Ocean found no trace of the jet.

A wing flap from MH370 discovered washed up on Pemba Island in Tanzania (Picture: Getty Images)

Malaysia’s Air Accident Investigation Bureau added that severe weather and sea conditions had ‘periodically’ disrupted attempts to locate the plane’s wreckage.

An extra search also took place in March of last 12 months, before Ocean Infinity were formally signed on.

It’s unclear if or when the ocean search will resume, with investigators most definitely to attend until next summer within the southern hemisphere for optimum conditions.

Under the terms of the contract, Ocean Infinity will receive £52million if it locates the wreckage.

Sarah Nor, the mother of Norliakmar Hamid, a passenger on missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, cries after she attended a briefing on the final investigation report on missing flight MH370 in Putrajaya, July 30, 2018.
Families of passengers and crew onboard flight 370 haven’t had closure 12 years after thedisappearance (Picture: AP)

The AAIB said in a press release: ‘The search activities undertaken have
not yielded any findings that confirm the placement of the aircraft
wreckage.

‘The Government stays committed to keeping the families informed and can proceed to supply updates as appropriate.’

The disappearance of flight 370 stays one among best mysteries in aviation history.

Several possible explanations have been offered, with officials considering a pilot suicide to be the most definitely causes of the crash.

Ocean Infinity photo of ship Seabed Constructor used in the search for Malaysian Airlines flight MH370.
The Seabed Constructor ship which was utilized in the previous seek for flight MH370 (Picture: Ocean Infinity)
AT SEA - APRIL 14: In this handout image provided by Commonwealth of Australia, Department of Defence, Phoenix Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) Bluefin-21 is craned over the side of Australian Defence Vessel Ocean Shield in the search for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH 370 on April 14, 2014. Twenty-six nations have been involved in the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 since it disappeared more than a month ago. (Photo by LEUT Kelli Lunt/Australia Department of Defence via Getty Images)
The underwater seek for flight 370 cost £120million between 2014 and 2017 alone (Picture: Getty Images)

The flight was en route for Beijing from Kuala Lumpur when it vanished over the Gulf of Thailand.

Nevertheless a series of handshakes sent by the aircraft indicating it had been within the air for nearly six hours after its initial disappearance fuelled speculation it had been deliberately flown off target.

The dearth of mayday call also suggested that the plane had not experienced a technical error or a hijacking.

While several parts of the doomed jet washed up on shores, including sections of the wings, the black boxes were never recovered.

The underwater seek for the plane is regarded as some of the expensive on record, with the 2014-2017 surveys having cost £120 million alone.

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