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Last Chance: New Search for Missing Flight MH370 Begins

© AP Photo / Joshua PaulIn this Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016, file photo, a waiter walks past a mural of flight MH370 in Shah Alam outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
In this Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016, file photo, a waiter walks past a mural of flight MH370 in Shah Alam outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. - Sputnik International
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A new search for the remains of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 has resumed on Monday, the Malaysian civil aviation department said in a statement.

The aircraft vanished en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in March 2014, with 239 people on board. Debris has been collected from Indian Ocean islands and Africa's east coast, with at least three pieces confirmed as coming from the missing plane.

Sand sculpture made by Indian sand artist Sudersan Pattnaik with a message of prayers for the missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 - Sputnik International
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US Seabed Exploration Firm to Begin Search for Missing MH370 Soon
Earlier this month, Texas-based US company Ocean Infinity was contracted by the Malaysian Government to search for the wreckage on a "no find, no fee" basis. The firm will be paid up to $70 million if it finds the plane within 90 days.

One of the world's most advanced undersea search vessels, the Seabed Constructor, set off from Durban, South Africa, on January 3. The search restarted immediately after a US-led team aboard the Seabed Constructor on Sunday reached the remote spot in the Indian Ocean that Australia's scientific agency believes is the plane's resting place.

The team will reportedly be using eight drone-like autonomous underwater vehicles, AUVs, to scour the seabed. Nothing on this scale with this equipment has been attempted before. 

"If they don't find anything in the 90 days… I think that would be the end for decades — this is like the final effort, if you like," Charitha Pattiaratchi, professor of coastal oceanography at the University of Western Australia, told Reuters.

Australia, Malaysia and China called off the original two-year search for the plane after finding nothing in a 120,000-sq-km underwater search zone in January last year, despite investigators urging the search be extended to a 25,000 sq km area further to the north.    

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