AP
A woman ties a message card for passengers aboard the missing Malaysia
Airlines flight MH370, at a shopping mall in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday.
Though a Chinese ship detected a pulse signal, officials said they "cannot verify any connection" at this stage between the electronic signals and the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370
The month-long hunt for the missing Malaysian plane
continued on Sunday after a Chinese ship reported the detection of
electronic pulse signals possibly related to the black box of the flight
MH370 in southern Indian Ocean.
Some 10 military
planes, two civil jets and 13 ships will look for any trace of flight
MH370 aided by good weather with a cloud base of 2,500 feet and
visibility greater than 10 km, according to the Joint Agency
Coordination Centre coordinating the operations, China’s state-run Xinhua reported.
The
search area is approximately 216,000 square km, about 2,000 km
northwest of Perth. It is about 300 km farther from the western coastal
city than the area searched on the day before, it said.
Reports
overnight that a black box detector deployed by Chinese patrol ship
Haixun 01 has detected electronic pulse signals in the Indian Ocean
related to MH370 “cannot be verified at this point in time”, the JACC
said in a statement.
Chinese patrol ship Haixun 01
had on Saturdayy detected a pulse signal with a frequency of 37.5kHz per
second in southern Indian Ocean waters.
The black
box detector deployed by the Haixun 01 picked up the signal at around 25
degrees south Latitude and 101 degrees east Longitude.
Also on Saturday, a Chinese air force plane spotted a number of white floating objects in the search area.
The
plane photographed the objects over a period of 20 minutes after
spotting them at 11:05 local time. The detection has been reported to
the JACC, the news agency reported.
The Beijing-bound
Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 — carrying 239 people, including five
Indians, an Indo-Canadian and 154 Chinese nationals — had mysteriously
vanished on March 8 after taking off from Kuala Lumpur.
The
mystery of the missing plane continued to baffle aviation and security
authorities who have so far not succeeded in tracking the aircraft
despite deploying hi-tech radar and other gadgets.
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