Search for missing Malaysian jet so far failed to produce any results

Search for missing Malaysian jet so far failed to produce any resultsShips and aircrafts searching for missing Malaysian jetliner have so far failed to locate the suspected debris that was recently shown in satellite images.

Satellite image provider DigitalGlobe recently provided some images of unknown objects in the Indian Ocean that might be from missing Malaysia Airlines' Boeing 777 (flight MH370) which disappeared nearly two weeks back en route to Beijing.

New Zealand's air force, which is involved in the trans-continental search, returned from a 2/½-hour search operation in the Indian Ocean in early hours on Friday without finding anything that could have come from the missing plane.

Air Vice-Marshal Kevin Short, of New Zealand's Defence Forces, said, "The crew never found any object of significance. Visibility wasn't very good, which makes it harder to search the surface of the water."

The missing plane (Boeing 777) had taken off from Kuala Lumpur at 12:41 a. m. last Saturday. According to schedule, it had to arrive at Beijing airport at 6:30 a. m. on the same day, but it lost contact with air traffic controllers at around 1:30 a. m. There were 239 people on board, including 12 crew members.

Malaysian investigators suspect that one of the pilots of the missing plane or someone with knowledge of flying a jet might have diverted the plane thousands of kilometers and then crashed it into some of the most isolated waters on planet.