TIME MH370

MH370 Search Will Move to New Area of Ocean

Crew aboard the Australian Defence Vessel Ocean Shield move the U.S. Navyís Bluefin-21 into position for deployment, in the southern Indian Ocean to look for the missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370
U.S. Navy/Reuters Crew aboard the Australian Defence Vessel Ocean Shield move the U.S. Navyís Bluefin-21 into position for deployment in the southern Indian Ocean April 14, 2014 to look for the missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 in this picture released by the U.S. Navy. Australian officials will announce a new search zone for the missing plane.

As Malaysian police deny reports that captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah is the primary suspect in the plane's disappearance

Australian officials will announce a new search zone for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 on Wednesday, the agency leading the search announced Sunday.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau said re-analyzed satellite data could move the search zone several hundred kilometers south of where it had been looking, CNN reports.

Since the flight went missing in March with 239 people aboard, search efforts have found no sign of the Boeing 777 plane or its passengers.

London newspaper The Sunday Times reported this weekend that Malaysian police have identified captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah as the primary suspect in the plane’s disappearance, but a police spokesperson denied the claims and told CNN that nothing had been conclusive so far and that the investigation was on-going.

The Times’ report acknowledges that police have not ruled out terrorism or mechanical errors and that the case against him relies on circumstantial evidence.

Shah was the only person in the flight crew who had no future plans or obligations, according to the story, and he had reportedly plotted and deleted flight paths to small runways across the Indian Ocean on a flight simulator at his home.

[CNN]

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