MH370: hand-written note, breaking news & new sighting
The third week of the hunt for flight 370 begins with another sighting of what may or may not turn out to be wreckage.
French satellite images reveal 122 objects in the southern Indian Ocean that could be debris from the missing Malaysian airliner.
Relatives of missing Chinese passengers clash with police in Beijing outside the Malaysian embassy, as Malaysian officials say the search will now focus on the southern part of the southern corridor.
As the search for missing Malaysia flight MH370 narrows, questions are being asked about what lies under the vast southern Indian Ocean.
Families of Chinese passengers aboard the missing MH370 clash with police outside Beijing’s Malaysian embassy and hold banners with the plea: “MH370, don’t make us wait too long!”
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak says a plane missing for more than two weeks with 239 people on board is assumed to have crashed in the southern Indian Ocean west of Perth with no survivors.
Click through the slides to see the key phases in the search for Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370.
New French satellite images show possible debris from the missing Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 being searched in the southern Indian Ocean.
The third week of the hunt for flight 370 begins with another sighting of what may or may not turn out to be wreckage.
China is investigating new satellite images of debris in the southern Indian Ocean, possibly from missing flight MH370, Malaysian officials say.
Investigators searching for Malaysia Airline’s flight MH370 say they have “no corroboration yet” that two objects spotted in the Indian Ocean have come from the missing plane.
After a day when there were no further sightings of possible wreckage from Malaysian Airlines flight 370, the extent of the challenge in trying to recover the plane and black boxes is becoming clear.
Two grainy satellite images that may or may not be wreckage from missing flight MH370 could be our strongest lead so far in the search for the plane. There’s a compelling reason why.
After 12 days, the first sign of a breakthrough in finding the missing Malaysian Airways plane. Will today be the day, finally, we when get more answers than questions?
Daniel Donnelly, a reporter with Channel 10 in Australia, describes what it is like on board one of the observation planes helping in the search for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
The world’s best survey ships and observation planes converge on a location in the remote south of the Indian Ocean, after a “breakthrough” in the hunt for missing flight MH370 is found.