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2 August 2015

The Indian Ocean Plane Wreckage: What Do We Know?

July 31, 2015
http://thediplomat.com/2015/07/the-indian-ocean-plane-wreckage-what-do-we-know/

On Wednesday, a team cleaning the beach on the island of Reunion discovered a piece of metal that looked to be part of an aircraft wing. The discovery has focused worldwide attention on Reunion, a French island east of Madagascar with a population of under 900,000–could the debris provides long-awaited evidence of the fate of Malaysia Airlines flight 370?

MH370 disappeared on March 8, 2014 while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Despite an intensive search involving nine countries, no trace of the plane or its 239 passengers and crew has been found. Investigators believe the plane crashed into the southern Indian Ocean, to the west of Australia; search efforts have focused in that region—3,700 km (2,300 miles) east of Reunion—for the past year, to no avail.

Now, however, the discovery of what appears to be part of an aircraft wing – the flaperon, to be precise – has raised new hopes, over 16 months after MH370 went missing. Australian Deputy Prime Minister Warren Trusscalled the discovery a “major lead” and a “very important development.” China’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying it “will follow [developments] closely.” There were 152 Chinese citizens on board the plane, the most from any country.


Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said in a statement that it was “too early to speculate” that the debris might have come from flight MH370. However, he noted that “the debris is very likely to be from a Boeing 777.” He also pointed out that “location [of the debris] is consistent with the drift analysis provided to the Malaysian investigation team, which showed a route from the southern Indian Ocean to Africa.” Still, he cautioned patience: “We have had many false alarms before.”

The debris will be shipped from Reunion to Toulouse, where the BEA (the French authority responsible for investigations into civil aviation incidents or accidents) will attempt to verify the origin of the wreckage. According to Razak, Malaysia is sending a team of experts to Toulouse, as well as sending a team to Reunion to examine where the debris was discovered.

If the debris is indeed identified as part of a Boeing 777, that raises the likelihood that it’s tied to MH370—that is the only such aircraft that is unaccounted for, according to the Aviation Safety Network. A local Reunion paper published a photo purportedly of the debris where the serial number 657BB is clearly readable. That serial number corresponds to a Boeing 777 serial number for the flaperon, which is mounted on the rearward edge of the wing and raised or lowered to control an aircraft’s bank. (The photograph, however, could not be independently verified, and some have questioned its authenticity).

Even if the wreckage is verified to come from the missing plane, it doesn’t mean the search is close to an end. Dr. David Ferreira, an oceanographer at the University of Reading, said the wreckage would not be very helpful in pinning down the final resting place of MH370. “Put bluntly, over a 16 months period, the debris could have traveled from nearly anywhere in the Indian Ocean to Reunion,” he told The Guardian in an email. Still, he explained, the debris could help narrow the potential search area if combined with other evidence.

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