Plane debris 'almost certainly' from MH370
Plane debris found on the coast of Mozambique "almost certainly" came from Malaysia Airline's ill-fated flight MH370, Australia's Transport Minister, Darren Chester says.
Plane debris found on the coast of Mozambique "almost certainly" came from Malaysia Airline's ill-fated flight MH370, Australia's Transport Minister, Darren Chester says.
Plane debris found on the coast of Mozambique "almost certainly" came from Malaysia Airline's ill-fated flight MH370, Australia's Transport Minister, Darren Chester says.
Malaysia has said it will send a team to retrieve a piece of debris found along the southern coast of South Africa to check whether it could belong to missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
Pieces of debris linked to missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 have arrived in Canberra for analysis.
The family of Perth man Paul Weeks, who was on the doomed Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, is suing the company for damages.
A South African teenager has found debris which will be sent to Australia for testing as part of the investigation into the disappearance of a Malaysia Airlines plane two years ago, the South African Civil Aviation Authority (SACAA) says.
Could this be the second clue in the two-year search for the doomed Malaysia Airlines plane?
A piece of wreckage found believed to be from a Boeing 777 plane and found off the Mozambique coast was discovered by an American lawyer who has been driving his own search for the missing aircraft.
It is almost two years since MH370 disappeared, and searchers hope they are closing in on the plane's resting place.
The search plane France deployed to look for MH370 debris off Reunion Island was grounded Saturday, just a day after the country launched an expanded search operation in the Indian Ocean.
A mobile app for Indian Ocean beachcombers hunting potential MH370 debris is the latest amateur tool in the expanding search for the missing flight.
A plastic bottle cap from Indonesia, a weathered toothbrush head and a salty toy wheel add to the mysteries of Reunion Island.
Reunion Island's top official has defended any notion the search has begun too late.
Malaysian aviation experts are confident that a window and other debris found on the remote Indian Ocean island of Reunion in the past few days are from missing MH370.
France will search for wreckage from the lost flight MH370 off the coast of Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean, following the discovery of a wing part thought to belong to the missing plane.
Malaysian authorities have regularly issued confusing statements in the 17 months since Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 disappeared.
International aviation experts are examining a window, seat cushions and aluminium believed to have come from missing flight MH370.
As Malaysia said a plane part found last week came from MH370, the family of a New Zealand man on the flight are disgusted they again were not told first.
Mother of victim says confirmation "just brings it all back".
Malaysian PM says it is with a heavy heart that he confirms the debris found on Reunion Island is from MH370.
Winds and ocean currents could have pushed wreckage from MH370 more than 2000 kilometres to Reunion Island, Australian experts say.
What beachcombers claim is a window from MH370 is more likely part of a sewing machine, police say.
RAW: A French CASA search plane flying off Reunion Island on Sunday looks for debris from missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370. Supplied: French Defence Dept.
Sea turtles ingesting plastic debris in the waters around Reunion Island often die. The search for suspected MH370 wreckage there has highlighted just how much plastic rubbish there is in the sea.
Johny Begue, the Reunion Island beach worker who found the MH370 wing wreckage gives his condolences to the families of the dead.
'That's not enough evidence' says one family of a victim in Malaysia as another in China questions whether the wing part was 'artificially' placed on Reunion Island.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak confirms a wing segment discovered on Reunion island is indeed from Flight MH370, making this the first real development in the search for the missing plane.
Kaylene Mann, who lost her brother Rodney and sister-in-law Mary on flight MH370, reacts to news part of the plane's fuselage may have been found.
American government officials and experts from Boeing have studied images of the object and expressed confidence that it had been part of the missing aircraft.
Debris washed up off East Africa prompts Malaysia to dispatch a team to Reunion Island, hoping to solve the mystery of missing Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370.
Aviation experts say it will take a few days to confirm if the plane wreckage, washed up on an island in the Indian Ocean east of Madagascar, was that of missing flight MH370.
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