Relatives of some of the 239 people who were on a Malaysia Airlines airplane that vanished in 2014 arrived in Madagascar on Saturday to ask for help in the search for debris from the missing aircraft that might have drifted across the Indian Ocean.
Half a dozen relatives traveled to the capital, Antananarivo, ahead of meetings with community leaders and a journey to coastal areas to talk to villagers about the missing airplane.
“We hope that we can raise awareness, teach them about how to identify debris, how to collect debris, what to do with it when they find it,” said Grace Nathan, a Malaysian whose mother was on Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.
Photo: AFP
The Boeing 777 airliner is believed to have crashed in the southern Indian Ocean after deviating from its flight path from Malaysia to Beijing on March 8, 2014.
“Mobilizing the local population is a good start,” Nathan said.
Nathan and her fellow travelers plan to talk to church leaders and non-governmental organizations that can spread the word in rural communities that are “not so savvy with the Internet” and might not even have heard about the missing airplane.
The relatives who arrived in Madagascar included Malaysians and Chinese who flew from Kuala Lumpur. They were met at the airport by Blaine Gibson, an American who found a piece of debris in Mozambique that officials said was almost certainly a horizontal stabilizer from a Flight MH370 wing. He has also collected pieces of potential debris in Madagascar.
A Frenchman who lost family on the missing flight was expected to join the group of relatives after arriving on a separate flight.
Malaysia, Australia and China are close to suspending a search of a vast area of seabed in the southern Indian Ocean, but relatives of the missing believe the discovery of debris in Africa by Gibson and others justifies calls for officials to keep looking.
“We want to keep the search going,” Nathan said.
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