Malaysia has been given greenlight to search for more possible debris of missing Malaysia Airline flight MH370 in waters near Mozambique and South Africa, officials said Thursday.
The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) Wednesday released a Technical Examination Report which has definitively said debris found in Mozambique originated from lost Malaysia Airlines flight 370.
Pieces of debris "almost certainly" from missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370 will be shipped back to Malaysia this week after undergoing careful examination by Australia's Transport Safety Bureau.
Aircraft debris recovered from Mozambique earlier this month is "almost certainly" from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, Australia's transport minister said on Thursday.
Malaysian officials said on Sunday that two pieces of suspected debris of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 have arrived in Australia for verification.
Suspected debris from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 discovered in Mozambique and French overseas Reunion Island recently will be sent to Australia and France for verification, Malaysian officials said Monday.
Malaysia is waiting for the verification of the two newly discovered debris in Mozambique and Reunion Island, officials said Monday, as the country marks the two-year anniversary of the missing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
A moment of silence was observed by Malaysian lawmakers on Tuesday as the country remains hopeful to find the Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 two years after its disappearance.
The suspected new debris found in French overseas Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean could be from the missing Malaysia Airlines flight according to the drifting calculation, a Malaysian official said Monday.
Mozambican aviation authorities said on Thursday that it welcomes international organizations with technical capacity to collaborate in the investigation and identification of the aircraft debris, which was found off the country's central coast three days ago.
The Australian government has on Thursday confirmed a piece of debris - possibly from missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370 - is on its way to Australia for further examination.
Early reports show "high possibility" that the debris found in Mozambique belongs to a Boeing 777, Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said on Wednesday.
A piece of wreckage believed to be debris from the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 was found washed up off the coast of Mozambique, media reported Wednesday.
Saturday is the seventh day since the landslide, and the mourning ritual was held in line with the Chinese tradition.
One man was pulled out of debris alive early Wednesday morning, more than 60 hours after a landslide hit an industrial park in the southern city of Shenzhen on Sunday.
At least seven people were killed and nine injured on Tuesday when stones and debris from a hill rolled down and damaged part of a Sikh temple's residential complex in northern India, said police.
Malaysian authorities have confirmed the recently discovered debris belonged to the missing Malaysian MH370 flight, kindling hopes the mystery around the flight be finally brought into light.