KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — A police investigation
may never determine the reason why the Malaysia Airlines jetliner
disappeared, and search planes scouring the India Ocean for any sign of
its wreckage aren't certain to find anything either, officials said
Wednesday.
The assessment by Malaysian and Australian officials
underscored the lack of knowledge authorities have about what happened
on Flight 370. It also points to a scenario that becomes more likely
with every passing day — that the fate of the Boeing 777 and the 239
people on it might remain a mystery forever.
The plane disappeared
March 8 on a flight to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur after its
transponders, which make the plane visible to commercial radar, were
shut off. Military radar picked it up the jet just under an hour later,
on the other side of the Malay peninsula. Authorities say until then its
"movements were consistent with deliberate action by someone on the
plane" but have not ruled out anything, including mechanical error.
Police
are investigating the pilots and crew for any evidence suggesting they
may have hijacked or sabotaged the plane. The backgrounds of the
passengers, two-thirds of whom were from China, have been checked by
local and international investigators and nothing suspicious has been
found.
"Investigations may go on and on and on. We have to clear
every little thing," Inspector General Khalid Abu Bakar told reporters
in Kuala Lumpur. "At the end of the investigations, we may not even know
the real cause. We may not even know the reason for this incident."
Police
are also investigating the cargo and the food served on the plane to
eliminate possible poisoning of passengers and crew, he said.
The
search for the plane began over the Gulf of Thailand and South China Sea
where the plane's last communications were, and then shifted west to
the Strait of Malacca where it was last spotted by military radar.
Experts then analyzed hourly satellite "handshakes" between the plane
and a satellite and now believe it crashed somewhere in the southern
Indian Ocean.
what happened
on Flight 370. It also points to a scenario that becomes more likely
with every passing day — that the fate of the Boeing 777 and the 239
people on it might remain a mystery forever.
The plane disappeared
March 8 on a flight to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur after its
transponders, which make the plane visible to commercial radar, were
shut off. Military radar picked it up the jet just under an hour later,
on the other side of the Malay peninsula. Authorities say until then its
"movements were consistent with deliberate action by someone on the
plane" but have not ruled out anything, including mechanical error.
Police
are investigating the pilots and crew for any evidence suggesting they
may have hijacked or sabotaged the plane. The backgrounds of the
passengers, two-thirds of whom were from China, have been checked by
local and international investigators and nothing suspicious has been
found.
"Investigations may go on and on and on. We have to clear
every little thing," Inspector General Khalid Abu Bakar told reporters
in Kuala Lumpur. "At the end of the investigations, we may not even know
the real cause. We may not even know the reason for this incident."
Police
are also investigating the cargo and the food served on the plane to
eliminate possible poisoning of passengers and crew, he said.
The
search for the plane began over the Gulf of Thailand and South China Sea
where the plane's last communications were, and then shifted west to
the Strait of Malacca where it was last spotted by military radar.
Experts then analyzed hourly satellite "handshakes" between the plane
and a satellite and now believe it crashed somewhere in the southern
Indian Ocean.
A search there began just over two weeks ago, and now involves at least nine ships and nine planes.
The
current search area is a 221,000-square-kilometer (85,000-square-mile)
patch of sea roughly a 2½-hour flight from Perth. The focus of the
search has moved several times as experts try to estimate where the
plane is most likely to have landed based on assumptions on its
altitude, speed and fuel. Currents in the sea are also being studied to
see where any wreckage is most likely to have drifted.
Angus
Houston, the head of a joint agency coordinating the multinational
search effort out of Australia, said no time frame had been set for the
search to end, but that a new approach would be needed if nothing showed
up.
"Over time, if we don't find anything on the surface, we're going to have to think about what we do next, because clearly it's vitally important for the families, it's vitally important for the governments involved that we find this airplane," he told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.
With no other data available indicating
where the plane went down, spotting wreckage is key to narrowing down
the search area and ultimately finding the plane's flight data
recorders, which will provide a wealth of information about the
condition the plane was flying under and possibly the communications or
sounds in the cockpit.
The data recorders emit a "ping" that can be detected by special
equipment towed by a ship in the immediate vicinity. But the recorders
stop transmitting the "pings" about 30 days after a crash. Locating the
data recorders and wreckage after that is possible, but it becomes an
even more daunting task.
Houston said that only once wreckage
from the plane was found "we will then be able to narrowly focus the
search area so that we can start to exploit the underwater technology
devices that will hopefully lead to where the aircraft is on the bottom
of the ocean."
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