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High-Tech Ship En Route to Resume Search for MH370

Shipping data showed the Seabed Constructor left Durban, South Africa, on Tuesday and was headed to Perth, Australia

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A US-based seabed exploration firm, Ocean Infinity on Wednesday said it was moving a vessel closer to a possible search area for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 as it soon expects to be awarded a contract by Malaysia to resume the search.

The disappearance of the aircraft en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in March 2014 with 239 people aboard ranks among the world's greatest aviation mysteries. Australia, China and Malaysia ended a fruitless A$200 million ($157 million) search in January 2017.

But in October, Malaysia said it was in talks with Ocean Infinity to resume the search on a "no-cure, no-fee" basis, meaning it will only get paid if it finds the plane.

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"Ocean Infinity is hopeful of receiving the final contract award for the resumption of the search for MH370 over the coming days," a company spokesman told Reuters in an emailed statement.

With a relatively narrow weather window, we are moving the vessel, Seabed Constructor, towards the vicinity of the possible search zone. This is designed to save time should the contract award be forthcoming, as hoped.
Spokesperson, Ocean Infinity 

Reuters’ shipping data showed the Seabed Constructor left Durban, South Africa, on Tuesday and was headed to Perth, Australia, where it is due on 7 February.

Malaysia's deputy transport minister, Aziz Kaprawi, said the government was negotiating final terms of the agreement with Ocean Infinity and he was not aware of the vessel's movement.

We are in the final stages of the decision. On our part, we have yet to finalise the agreement.
Aziz Kaprawi

When asked whether Australia and China would be consulted about the contract award, Aziz said, "Basically, Malaysia will make the decision, as this offer was made to the Malaysian government. The cost will also be decided by Malaysia."

Australia's Deputy Prime Minister, Barnaby Joyce, said the plane may never be found.

"I have, to be quite frank, some concerns as to whether it will be found," he told Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio on Thursday.

We’ve seen parts of the wreckage washing up on beaches in Madagascar and other parts a long way away from the arc in which we would presume to find it in, which might suggest that it broke up.
Barnaby Joyce

Investigators believe someone may have deliberately switched off the transponder of the Boeing 777 before diverting it over the Indian Ocean.

Various pieces of debris have been collected from Indian Ocean islands and Africa’s east coast, and at least three of them have been confirmed as coming from the missing plane.

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

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