Australia publishes the final report on the search for aircraft MH370

The Australian Traffic Safety Administration said: "It is not possible to ascertain the cause of the missing MH370 until the plane is found".

On October 3, the Australian Traffic Safety Administration (ATSB), the agency in charge of overseeing the search for Malaysia Airlines Airlines' missing plane MH370 , announced its final public report. search, which expressed regret for not finding the missing plane, and stressed that this was "unacceptable".

The ATSB report stated: "It is not possible to ascertain the cause of the missing MH370 until the plane is found". The report also emphasized that "Unimaginable and socially unacceptable in a modern aviation era a large commercial plane is missing, and the world is not sure what happened to that plane as well as the people on the plane ".

On March 8, 2014, the Boeing 777 flew the flight number MH370 on the journey from Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia) to Beijing (China) with 239 people including passengers and crew on the plane. lost contact with the ground. A large-scale search in aviation history, led by Australia with the participation of China and Malaysia, was conducted.

Picture 1 of Australia publishes the final report on the search for aircraft MH370
Message of remembrance of victims MH370, commemorating one year of the loss of this plane in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on March 6, 2015.(Photo: AFP / VNA).

Under the initial assumption, the aircraft turned to fly and fell in the South Indian Ocean off the west coast of Australia. The initial search was conducted in a 60,000 square kilometers area, doubling in May 2015.

To date, 27 fragments have been found, including 2 fragments from South Africa discovered 2 weeks ago. Of these, only three fragments were confirmed to belong to the MH370 aircraft, five other fragments were identified as 'almost certain' from Boeing 777 aircraft. However, the location of the aircraft was not yet determined, No victim's body was found, nor could the exact cause of the disaster be identified.

The search has been stopped since January 2017 after more than 2 years of continuous efforts with resources and professional experience from private enterprises, international organizations and many key agencies. Different cover and many individuals.

In the 440-page report published on October 3, ATSB detailed the unsuccessful search for 1,046 deep-sea and submarine days in the Indian Ocean, along with scientific analysis of photos. taken via satellites, ocean currents and fragments found.

The report states that undersea search has reviewed most areas likely to fall. The report expressed "extremely sorry for not finding the missing plane as well as the people on the plane".

The head of ATSB Greg Hood expressed condolences to his relatives' family of 239 passengers and the missing crew in the incident he described as "a major disaster". However, he hoped they were comforted because "the search team worked hard to find the answer".

Malaysia has continued to investigate to find the missing plane. Last August, authorities said they had received an offer from Ocean Infinity private bottom fishing company to resume their search.