Final Search for Flight MH370 Yields No New Clues After 12 Years
- On March 8, Malaysia's Air Accident Investigation Bureau said the latest search produced no new clues after Ocean Infinity surveyed about 7,571 sq km in two phases in the southern Indian Ocean.
- Under a 'no find, no fee' deal, Ocean Infinity resumed searches in December and concluded the second phase on Jan 23, after a seasonal weather pause.
- Final contact 38 minutes after take-off ended crew communication, but military radar tracked flight MH370 for another hour before it vanished 230 miles from Penang Island.
- All 227 passengers and 12 crew are presumed dead, and debris linked to the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 has washed up along the eastern coast of Africa.
- Reliance on Inmarsat signals has left investigators confused for a decade, while Ismail Hammad, Egypt Air chief engineer, urged exploring the Philippine archipelago of 7,641 islands, arguing, 'He clarified that programming the autopilot computer using only spatial coordinates can be challenging. He added'.
11 Articles
11 Articles
'I'm an engineer and I know why MH370 missing plane search won't succeed'
An aviation engineer has shared his theory on the Malaysia Airlines MH370 search failure, as Ocean Infinity resumed operations in December 2025 nearly 12 years after the Boeing 777 disappeared on March 8, 2014
"Tell the truth!": 12 years after the disappearance of flight MH370, one of the greatest mysteries of civil aviation, Chinese passenger relatives demanded on Monday "transparency" and Malaysia's responses after stopping further research.
As if swallowed by the ground: Twelve years ago the flight MH370 disappeared. Ocean Infinity has now again searched thousands of square kilometres of seabed.
The search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, which disappeared in March 2014 with 239 people on board, has ended without any tangible results, the Malaysian transport ministry said on Sunday. The search was carried out in an area of 15,000 square kilometers in the Indian Ocean, reports the French news agency AFP.
Oliver Plunkett said the company's ship officially left the search zone on January 23, in its latest effort to find MH370.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 43% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium








