MH370: Conflicting messages on origin of piece cause frustration - Action News
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MH370: Conflicting messages on origin of piece cause frustration

The confusion and frustration that have punctuated the investigation into the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 erupted anew on Thursday, after officials offered conflicting levels of confidence on whether a piece of a wing found washed up on an Indian Ocean island last week came from the vanished plane.

Malaysian prime minister at odds with France, U.S. and Australia, who have stopped short of full confirmation

More jet debris found but MH370 message still muddled

9 years ago
Duration 3:36
Malaysian prime minister 'confirmed' debris is from lost airliner, but France, U.S. and Australia say more analysis is needed

Malaysia's transport minister said Thursday that a maintenance seal and other details prove that a wing part found on an Indian Ocean island belongs to missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, a claim the prime minister made hours earlier but that other countries involved in the investigation have shied from making.

Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said a maintenance seal on the flaperon matches the airline's records, though he didn't elaborate.

"From our first observation, the colour tone and all maintenance records that we have, we know. Our records show that it's the same as MH370," Liow said. He said there are "many other technical details that I do not have to reveal" but that confirm the part is from Flight 370.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak announced early Thursday morning that the part, known as a flaperon, did indeed come from the doomed aircraft, but authorities in France, the U.S. and Australia have stopped short of full confirmation.

The conflicting comments infuriated many families of those on board the plane, who have waited more than 500 days for concrete clues into the fates of their loved ones. Dai Shuqin, the sister of one of the passengers, was among about a dozen Chinese relatives who held a demonstration outside Malaysia Airlines' offices in Beijing.

Bao Lanfang, second from right, whose daughter-in-law, son, and granddaughter were aboard Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, kneels in grief while speaking to journalists outside the company's offices in Beijing on Thursday. About a dozen Chinese relatives of passengers of the flight demonstrated outside the offices. (Mark Schiefelbein/Associated Press)

"France is being cautious about it, but Malaysia is desperate to put an end to this case and run away from all responsibilities," she said.

Liow said differences with other countries amounted to "a choice of words."

"They want to continue with additional tests. We respect their decision," Liow said of the French.

Liow also said more apparent plane debris has been found on Reunion Island and sent to local authorities for French investigators to examine. He said a Malaysian team found the objects, including a window and some aluminum foil, but the minister's press secretary later it was "window material" rather than a window that was recovered.

"I can only ascertain that it's plane debris," Liow said. "I cannot confirm that it's from MH370."

Multiple French officials involved in the investigation in Reunion and in Paris said they were unaware of any new debris. They requested anonymity, because they did not want to appear critical of the Malaysian investigation.

The disappearance of the Boeing 777 jetliner while on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, has been one of the biggest mysteries in aviation history. Officials believe it crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, killing all 239 people on board, but the wreckage and the cause remain elusive.

"It is with a very heavy heart that I must tell you that an international team of experts has conclusively confirmed that the aircraft debris found on Reunion Island is indeed MH370," Najib told reporters. The French territory is thousands of kilometers west of the area being searched for wreckage from the flight.

Paris deputy Prosecutor Serge Mackowiak speaks during a press conference Wednesday, saying there's a 'strong presumption' the flaperon belongs to the missing plane. (Kamil Zihnioglu/The Associated Press)

But at a news conference in Paris, Deputy Prosecutor Serge Mackowiak declined to confirm that the debris belonged to Flight 370, though he said there were strong indications that it did.

"The very strong conjectures are to be confirmed by complementary analysis that will begin tomorrow morning," Mackowiak said. "The experts are conducting their work as fast as they can in order to give complete and reliable information as quickly as possible."

The caution was typical of how France carries out air crash investigations. The French agency that usually handles such probes, known as the BEA, can take months if not years to lay out exhaustive conclusions in reports that last hundreds of pages. During the inquiries, they only rarely offer interim assessments and even more rarely comment.

The Australian government, which leads the seabed search for wreckage west of Australia, was also less certain than Malaysia, saying only that "based on high probability, it is MH370."

Publicly, Australian officials withheld criticism of Najib's announcement, with Australian Transport Minister Warren Truss saying Australia respected Malaysia's right to make that call, given it is the government in charge of the investigation.

"Of course there is still some i's not dotted and t's not crossed. There is still a very small element of doubt," Truss said.

Privately, however, there were questions about why Najib had moved forward with the statement before all countries had agreed. An Australian government official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to comment publicly, said Malaysia wasn't supposed to make the announcement, and had gone out on its own making a conclusive statement before getting the evidence to back it up.

Many families of those on board, who have waited nearly 17 months for tangible evidence, were fed up with the mixed messages.

Family members of the missing on Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, Jacquita Gomes, wife of Patrick Gomes, in-flight supervisor, and Melanie Antonio, wife of Andrew Nari, chief steward, check a mobile phone in Gomes's house outside Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday. (Joshua Paul/Associated Press)

"Why the hell do you have one confirm and one not?" said Sara Weeks, the sister of New Zealander Paul Weeks, who was on board. "Why not wait and get everybody on the same page so the families don't need to go through this turmoil?"

Ross Tapsell, a Malaysia expert at the Australian National University, said he suspects Najib was trying to distract Malaysians from a corruption scandal. On Monday, Malaysia's anti-corruption agency said that $700 million in Najib's personal bank accounts came from donations, not from a debt-ridden state investment fund.

"He's under so much political pressure at the moment," Tapsell said. "I presume if he can try to move the conversation back to the MH370 stuff, it's in his interests to do so."

Najib would also want to stamp his authority on the search, which Malaysia oversees, Tapsell said, rather than allow France to dominate attention through its leading role in examining the wing fragment.

A U.S. official familiar with the investigation said the flaperon clearly is from a Boeing 777. However, a team of experts in France examining the part hadn't yet been able to find anything linking it specifically to the missing plane, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because there was no authorization to talk publicly about the case.

With no other 777s or flaperons known to be missing, it makes sense that the part comes from Flight 370, but the U.S. and Boeing team members are merely trying "to be precise," the official said.