MH370: DCA officers sent to Madagascar to identify debris - Liow

Bernama
September 5, 2017 21:14 MYT
Liow urges the public to refrain from making any speculation and let the police do their job. - BERNAMA/File
Malaysia has dispatched Department of Civil Aviation (DCA) officers to Madagascar to help identify a piece of debris which could be from the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, Transport Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said.
He said the standard operating procedures (SOP) in handling the debris involved either Malaysia sending its officers there or the debris being transferred here for identification.
But, he said that in view of the alleged assassination last month of Malaysian honorary consul to Madagascar, Zahid Houseinaly Reza, who was helping in the recovery process of debris washed up on the island, relevant officers had been dispatched there.
"Instead of sending the debris here, we've sent our officers there," he told reporters when queried on the matter after opening the World Maritime Day 2017 here today.
He also urged the public to refrain from making any speculation and let the police do their job.
The aircraft with 239 people aboard vanished on March 8, 2014 en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur in what has been described as the world's biggest aviation mystery. -- BERNAMA
READ: Decision to resume search for MH370 depends on experts, countries involved - Liow
READ: Australian agency believes it can locate MH370 with 'unprecedented precision'
VIDEO: American firm offers to resume search for MH370
#Liow Tiong Lai #Malaysia Airlines #MH370 #missing #SOP
;