Satellite images show ‘potential objects’ in search for Malaysian jetliner

French satellite images reveal items in seas off Australia

Royal Australian Air Force flight lieutenant Russell Adams speaks to members of the media after returning from the search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. Photograph: Matt Jelonek/Reuters
Royal Australian Air Force flight lieutenant Russell Adams speaks to members of the media after returning from the search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. Photograph: Matt Jelonek/Reuters

Images taken by Chinese and French satellites and separate sightings of scattered debris have become the focus of the search in the Indian Ocean for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.

Malaysia said yesterday that new French satellite images showed “potential objects” related to the flight in the seas off Australia.

“This morning [yesterday], Malaysia received new satellite images from the French authorities showing potential objects in the vicinity of the southern corridor,” the Malaysian transport ministry said in a statement. “Malaysia immediately relayed these images to the Australian rescue co-ordination centre.”

The statement gave no details about whether the objects were in the same vicinity as the other possible finds in a vast swathe of some of the most inhospitable sea territory on Earth.

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On Saturday, images taken on March 18th by a Chinese satellite were released, appearing to show an object measuring 22m by 13m about 1,550km (960 miles) southwest of Perth. The release of the images coincided with an update from the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (Amsa) late on Saturday that a number of small objects had been visually identified by one of the search aircraft.

“During Saturday’s search activities a civil aircraft tasked by Amsa reported sighting a number of small objects with the naked eye, including a wooden pallet, within a radius of five kilometres,” the statement said.

In a further briefing on Sunday, Mike Barton, the rescue co-ordination centre chief at Asma, said that the possible debris seen by the search aircraft also included “strapping belts of different lengths”.

“We’ve gone back to that area today to try and refine it but are also continuing with another methodical search to try and give us some clues,” he said. “The area continues to change as the water movements change. We’re tracking that with self-locating datum buoys.”

The Australian prime minister, Tony Abbott, had earlier announced on Thursday that a “credible” sighting had been made in the Indian Ocean, about 2,500km southwest of Perth, based on satellite imagery of two large objects.

The series of announcements has seen a major concentration of effort to scour the southern Indian Ocean for the aircraft, which went missing more than two weeks ago.

Eight aircraft have been tasked by Amsa to undertake the search, and vessels from the United States, New Zealand, China and Japan are also aiding in the operation.

None of the sightings has been confirmed, and Mr Abbott said yesterday that while the findings were “credible leads” they offered “no more than hope” at this stage.

“It is still too early to be definite but obviously we have now had a number of very credible leads, and there is increasing hope, no more than hope that we might be on the road to discovering what did happen to the aircraft,” Mr Abbott said at a press conference in Papua New Guinea.


Weather conditions
Poor weather conditions have further complicated the search mission, and will make the job of observers on the search vessels more difficult. A spokeswoman for the Australian Bureau of Meteorology said visibility would continue to be reduced over the rest of yesterday.

Satellite and meteorology experts have expressed doubts about the prospect of finding the objects in the Indian Ocean believed to be linked to the missing flight, saying the debris could have drifted hundreds of miles since it was first detected due to strong currents. The search area yesterday was split into two areas to account for the possible drifts. – (Guardian service)