Flight MH370 Victims’ Families Welcome Follow-Up Search Operation to Begin in October!

The statement also explained that it will not be able to identify the precise location of the aircraft on its own but it is hoped that when it is added to their existing knowledge and any future learnings, a specific location of the aircraft will be able to be identified.

Meanwhile, the search for the wreckage of Flight MH370 and its parts has also generated a response from private individuals.

A trio of amateur investigators recently met up to scour the South African shoreline in the hope of finding new evidence for the missing plane.

The amateur investigators include Blaine Gibson, Neels Kruger, and Liam Lotter, who have reportedly uncovered a dozen of suspected pieces of debris between them from the missing Flight MH370 wreckage.

According to reports, the trio has accomplished what an expansive sweep of the Indian Ocean has not done, which is finding new pieces of the aircraft.

Gibson, a lawyer from Seattle, found debris in March in Mozambique that Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said had a high possibility of being from Flight MH370. Lotter, a teenager from South Africa, discovered a wing part last December that the Australian Minister for Infrastructure and Transport said was almost certainly from the missing plane. Kruger, an archaeologist from South Africa, located an engine part also in March that also had links to the plane.

The amateur investigators plan to walk along beaches in the South African province of KwaZulu-Natal and look for plastic, metal, or fiberglass.

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