Australia will only resume the search for the Malaysia Airlines plane that disappeared with 239 people onboard in the Indian Ocean in 2014 if there is "credible new information", Transport Minister Darren Chester said on Wednesday.
"That doesn't rule out the fact, in future, whether through better analysis of data, if new technology becomes available or through improved equipment or something of that nature, we may have a breakthrough in the future," Chester said at a news conference.
[EFE/EPA]
18/1/17
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"That doesn't rule out the fact, in future, whether through better analysis of data, if new technology becomes available or through improved equipment or something of that nature, we may have a breakthrough in the future," Chester said at a news conference.
[EFE/EPA]
18/1/17
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Related:
- Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 relatives to search for debris in Madagascar
- Report: No One at Controls When MH370 Crashed
- Malaysia: Downing mode of MH370 under investigation
- New suspected MH370 debris found with marks of fire
- MH370 fell out of sky after engine failure: Australian analysis
- Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 : MH370 was flown into water, says Canadian air crash expert
- Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 : Data from pilot’s flight simulator confirmed someone plotted a course to Indian Ocean
- FBI investigation on MH370 captain offers no new clue to aircraft location. This type of scenario is not new and has been reported in the media previously
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