Australia PM in Malaysia Ahead of Intensified MH370 Search
19 October 2018 19:18 WIB
TEMPO.CO, Kuala Lumpur - Australian PM Tony Abbott has arrived in Malaysia for a one-day official visit ahead of an intensified search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, which went missing six months ago and is believed to have crashed in the southern Indian Ocean.
Abbott headed to Malaysia's administrative capital Putrajaya upon arrival yesterday morning and was met by his Malaysian counterpart Najib Razak with whom he will discuss the dual tragedies of MH370 and MH17, the Malaysia Airlines plane which exploded over strife-torn eastern Ukraine in July, Malaysia's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
"High on the agenda is discussions on the status of the two countries' cooperation in relation to Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 and Flight MH17 incidents," the ministry said. The two premiers will meet with Malaysian personnel involved in the missions to find MH370 and to salvage wreckage and remains from the MH17 crash site.
They will also discuss other "regional and international issues of common concern". "This visit will undoubtedly further cement the close and outstanding relations between the two countries," the ministry said.
Australia is leading what has so far been a fruitless search in a vast stretch of the southern Indian Ocean, where MH370 is believed to have gone down after inexplicably veering off course from its Kuala Lumpur-Beijing route on March 8. The Boeing 777-200 was carrying 239 people.
Australian authorities said Friday that "hard spots" had been found on the Indian Ocean seabed but that they would most likely be geological features. Experts are preparing for a more intense underwater search to begin this month in a dauntingly vast stretch of ocean measuring 60,000 square kilometers, in addition to ongoing mapping through a sonar survey.
Malaysia's government and the national flag carrier were widely criticized over what many saw as a disorganized and secretive response to MH370's disappearance. Flight MH17 went down in Ukraine on July 17, killing all 289 people aboard, including 38 Australian citizens or residents.
Dutch air crash investigators have announced that they will release a preliminary report on Tuesday into what brought down the flight, travelling from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur. The Netherlands is leading the probe into the crash, which killed 193 Dutch citizens.
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