PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia: Hope of finding flight MH370's final resting place is "fading" and the massive three-nation search for the doomed jet will be suspended if nothing turns up in the suspected crash zone, Malaysia, Australia and China said Friday.
The search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 will be suspended if the plane is not found in the current search area, Malaysia, China and Australia said in a joint statement on Friday.
The aircraft, with 239 aboard, disappeared in March 2014 during a flight from the Malaysian capital to Beijing. Almost $135 million has been spent on an underwater search spanning 120,000 square kilometres in the southern Indian Ocean.
“In the absence of new credible evidence, Malaysia, Australia and China have collectively agreed to suspend the search upon completion of the 120,000-km search,” Malaysian transport minister Liow Tiong Lai said. “I must emphasise that this does mean we are giving up on the search for MH370,” he added, in a statement read out to the media.
With the designated search area due to be fully scanned within weeks, transport ministers from the three countries made the announcement after discussing the future of the unprecedented deep-sea hunt for the Malaysia Airlines passenger plane.
"With less than 10,000 square kilometres of the high priority search area remaining to be searched, ministers acknowledged that despite the best efforts of all involved the likelihood of finding the aircraft is fading," said a joint statement after the meeting in Malaysia's administrative capital Putrajaya.
Unless "credible new evidence" turns up by the time the current operations are completed, "the search would not end, but be suspended" until solid new information pointing to a crash site emerges, they said.
The Australian-led operation is scouring the seafloor within a 120,000-square-kilometre belt of remote Indian Ocean far off Western Australia, where authorities believe MH370 went down.
The use of the term "suspended" was an apparent nod to anguished families who have stepped up pressure on authorities not to completely close the book on efforts to locate the aircraft.
Some relatives have raised doubts over whether the right area is being searched and have called for a thorough reassessment of satellite data used to determine the suspected crash zone.
Several next-of-kin who turned up for a press briefing by the three ministers told reporters they welcomed the official statement.
"This means authorities are committed to finding answers and not just quitting. This is to be welcomed," said K.S. Narendran, a business consultant in Chennai, India, whose wife Chandrika Sharma was on board.
Several pieces of debris that apparently drifted thousands of kilometres toward the African coast have been identified as definitely or probably from the Boeing 777 but have shed no light on where exactly the plane went down or why.
Authorities hope to find a crash site and eventually recover and examine the flight data recorders for clues into what happened.