JUHUDIN ZA KUITAFUTA NDEGE YA MALAYSIA ZINENDELEA
Members
of the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) scan the seas about 140
nautical miles north-east of Kota Baru, Malaysia, for any signs of the
missing Malaysia Airlines plane
Oil
slicks can be seen from the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) plane
scanning the seas about 140 nautical miles north-east of Kota Baru,
Malaysia
The Civil
Aviation Authority of Vietnam said on its website searches were being
conducted about 140 km (90 miles) southwest of Tho Chu island, which is
located about 200 km off the coast of southern Vietnam
The
possibility of a further two stolen passports used on the same flight is
now being investigated after it emerged that no cross checks were
carried out against Interpol's lost and stolen database.
uthorities had today still found no trace of the missing Malaysian Airlines plane despite searches by ships from six navies and dozens of military aircraft.
The
massive search is mainly in a 50-nautical mile radius from where the
last contact with the plane was made, midway between Malaysia's east
coast and the southern tip of Vietnam.
A U.S. led search meanwhile is also taking place hundreds of miles away on the other side of the Malaysian peninsula
The
search was stepped up for debris and clues, as police today revealed the
two men who boarded the plane with stolen passports were not of Asian
appearance
Malaysia's
civil aviation chief said today that the search for the Boeing 777
which vanished early Saturday morning had failed to find anything and
that a sighting of a yellow object, which was earlier suspected to have
been a life raft, was found to be a false alarm.
It has now also been confirmed an oil slick suspected of coming from the wreckage was not jet fuel.
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