Malaysia
has sent a team to the French island of Reunion, in the western Indian Ocean, to
investigate whether wreckage found there could be from the missing Malaysia
Airlines Flight MH370 plane which disappeared last year.
The
Malaysian transport minister confirmed that the investigation team had been
dispatched late on Wednesday.
Malaysia
Airlines said in a statement on Thursday that it was “too premature for the
airline to speculate the origin of the flaperon” found washed up on Reunion
Island.
“With
regards to the reports of the discovery of an aircraft flaperon at Reunion
Island, Malaysia Airlines is working with the relevant authorities to confirm
the matter,” the statement said.
France’s
air crash investigation agency (BEA) said earlier on Wednesday that it was
studying the piece of plane debris, but also added that it was too early to say
if it came from MH370.
A spokesman for the agency said the part had not been
identified. Aviation experts said that based on photographs of the debris it
appeared to be a wing flap.
No
trace has been found of MH370, which disappeared in March last year carrying 239
passengers and crew from Kuala Lumpur, bound for Beijing, in what has become one
of the greatest mysteries in aviation history. Most of the passengers were
Chinese.
Search
efforts for the Boeing 777, led by Australia, have focused on a broad expanse of
the southern Indian Ocean off Australia.
“At
this point in time, the BEA is studying the information on the airplane part
found in La Reunion, in coordination with our Malaysian and Australian
colleagues, and with the judicial authorities,” the BEA spokesman said in an
email.
“The
part has not yet been identified and it is not possible at this hour to
ascertain whether the part is from a B777 and/or from MH370.”
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