This Article is From Mar 29, 2014

Hope floats but missing jet remains elusive

Hope floats but missing jet remains elusive

Malaysia's acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein gestures as he speaks about the search for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, during a news conference at The Everly Hotel in Putrajaya March 29, 2014.

Planes and ships scoured the new search zone for the missing Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 on Saturday, hoping to recover and analyse any of the several objects spotted from the air.

NEW OBJECTS, BUT NONE RECOVERED:
A Chinese plane flying over the search zone in the southern Indian Ocean 1,800 kilometres (1,118 miles) west of Perth, Australia, reported seeing three suspicious objects white, red and orange in color. On Friday, planes also spotted several objects, including two rectangular items that were blue and gray. Six ships are in the area trying to recover and inspect them, but without success.

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority said it was not known how much flotsam, such as from fishing activities, is ordinarily floating in the ocean. "At least one distinctive fishing object has been identified," it said.

Malaysia's Defence Minister Hishammuddin Hussein told reporters near Kuala Lumpur after meeting several families of passengers on the plane that he's hoping for some news soon.

NEW AREA STILL LARGE:
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the job of locating the debris was still difficult. "We should not underestimate the difficulty of this work - it is an extraordinarily remote location."

The area spans about 123,000 square miles (319,000 square kilometres), roughly the size of Poland or New Mexico. In most places, depths range from about 6,560 feet (2,000 metres) to 13,120 feet (4,000 metres), although the much deeper Diamantina trench edges the search area.

ANXIOUS FAMILIES:
Relatives and friends of the passengers said they were tortured by the uncertainty over the fate of their loved ones, as they wait for hard evidence that the plane had crashed.

"This is the trauma of maybe he's dead, maybe he's not. Maybe he's still alive and we need to find him. Maybe he died within the first hour of the flight, and we don't know," Sarah Bajc, the American girlfriend of US passenger Philip Wood, said in an interview in Beijing. "I mean, there's absolutely no way for me to reconcile that in my heart."

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