10-07-2015, 06:50 AM
(09-30-2015, 04:48 PM)Peetwo Wrote:Quote:
Malaysia ‘hopes for’ MH370 search talks in China next week
Ben Sandilands | Sep 30, 2015 3:31PM |
Hoping to arrange a date with China, Malaysia transport minister Liow Tiong Lai
Following on China’s snubbing of a tripartite meeting concerning the search for missing flight MH370, Malaysia’s transport minister Liow Tiong Lai says he hopes Australia, Malaysia and China will meet in China next week to discuss a more effective search strategy.
All that has been said about this in Australia at this hour is that today’s weekly MH370 search update will not happen until tomorrow.
Perhaps Australia is working the ‘phones to ensure that Malaysia’s hopes are realised. It is reasonable to hold that Australia’s relations with the PRC are somewhat better than Malaysia’s.
There are some nuanced references to the progress of the search in this brief Malaysian news report, plus a weird linkage being made between the removal of Tony Abbott from the position of PM and the continuation of the search under Malcolm Turnbull
Ok trying to get this straight??- the officials from the three countries involved in the MH370 SIO search have just met and the Malaysians, with Australian support, are proposing a Tripartite meeting at a Ministerial level in China next week - ok got it I think??
In an update to the above it would appear that the Malaysians are still trying to get that meeting happening, won't be this week though...
Courtesy the IBT:
Quote:Flight MH370 Update: Malaysia Proposes Tripartite Meeting To Discuss Next Step In Search Operation
By Suman Varandani @suman09 s.varandani@ibtimes.com on October 06 2015 5:50 AM EDT
The map shows the area where the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is concentrated. Australian Transport Safety Bureau
Malaysia has proposed a tripartite meeting with transport ministers of Australia and China to discuss the next step in the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370. The news of the meeting comes weeks after French prosecutors confirmed that a wing component found in July on Réunion Island came from the missing plane.
Datuk Seri Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, director general of Malaysia’s Civil Aviation Department (DCA), said Monday that the three countries remained committed to the search for the aircraft, Star Online, a local newspaper, reported. The Boeing 777-200 went missing on March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board while on its way from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
“We are looking for a suitable date for the ministers to meet on the way forward in searching for MH370,” Azharuddin reportedly said. “I attended a meeting of senior officials in Beijing last week and the three countries are still committed to the search at the current existing area.”
Azharuddin reportedly said that Malaysia’s Transport Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai has been briefed on the Beijing meeting, which was attended by officials from China's Transport and Foreign ministries and Australia's Joint Agency Coordination Centre (JACC) and Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB). Officials from Malaysia’s transport ministry and DCA as well as representatives from the Flight MH370’s next-of-kin committee also attended the meeting.
However, no other details of the meeting were revealed by Azharuddin, who said that the search operation will continue until next year.
The international search, led by Australia, is underway in a 46,332-square-mile area in the southern Indian Ocean, where authorities believe the plane went down.
In an operational update released last week, JACC stated that Fugro Discovery, which is focused on returning to more than 30 sites in the southern Indian Ocean where search vessels have previously made “sonar contacts of interest,” resurveyed two sonar contacts.
“The resurvey by Fugro Discovery over the past week was able to assist in assessing these contacts as not related to the search for MH370,” JACC said, in the statement, adding that bad weather conditions in the remote part of southern Indian Ocean were hindering the operations.
In regards to Victor's QON:
Victor Iannello @RadiantPhysics
Malaysian investigators will not address important questions regarding radar until next report in March 2016. #MH370
Victor did keep trying but I'm afraid he got the same 'up yours' response...FCOL
MTF..P2