All evidence points to Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 being
lost in the remote Indian Ocean, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said on
Monday, backing his Malaysian counterpart's view that the plane crashed.
The flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing vanished on March 8
carrying 239 passengers and crew, but more than three weeks later no wreckage
has been found.
Many relatives of those on board have been incensed at the
announcement on March 24 by Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak that -- based
on detailed analysis of satellite data -- the plane could be presumed lost at
sea.
But Abbott said he agreed with Najib's conclusions.
"The accumulation of evidence is that the aircraft has
been lost and it has been lost somewhere in the south of the Indian
Ocean," he told reporters at the Perth military base coordinating the
search.
"That's the absolutely overwhelming wave of evidence
and I think that Prime Minister Najib Razak was perfectly entitled to come to
that conclusion, and I think once that conclusion had been arrived at, it was
his duty to make that conclusion public."
Australia is coordinating the international hunt for the
missing Boeing 777, which involves about 100 personnel searching from onboard
surveillance aircraft and 1,000 sailors in ships in or near the search zone.
"This is an extraordinarly difficult exercise. We are
searching a vast area of ocean and we are working on quite limited
information," Abbott said.
"Nevertheless, the best brains in the world are
applying themselves to this task, all of the technological mastery that we have
is being applied and brought to bear here. If this mystery is solvable, we will
solve it. But I don't want to underestimate just how difficult it is."
The Australian leader refused to put a time limit on the
search, saying: "We can keep searching for quite some time to come. The
intensity of our search and the magnitude of our search is increasing, not
decreasing."
"We owe it to the families, we owe it to everyone that
travels by air, we owe it to the governments of the countries who had citizens
on that aircraft, we owe it to the wider world which has been transfixed by
this mystery for three weeks now," he said.
"We owe it to everyone to do everything we reasonably
can."
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