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10-08-2015, 05:20 AM
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-Reports emerge that 'plane debris' washed up in the Maldives on May 31
-Maldives locals report seeing a 'low-flying jet' on the day MH370 disappeared
-Airline employee insists suspected find 'changes everything' about search
-Police are reported to have removed the parts for further analysis

Debris from the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 may have washed up on an island in Maldives, in the Indian Ocean, according to local newspaper reports.

Police have yet to confirm the reports, but plane debris is said to have been found in Baa Atoll Fehendhoo and Fulhahdhoo, both in the Southern Maalhosmadulhu Atoll.

The island of Noonu Atoll, in Miladhunmadulu Atoll, is also said to have yielded a discovery, according to the news website Haveeru.

A photograph of one of the large pieces of metal found near the Banyan Tree resort on Vabbinfaru island bears a striking resemblance to the barnacle-covered wing part that washed up on Reunion island in July, a distance of 2,000 miles from the Maldives.

Maldives resident Mohamed Wafir, who posted the original photographs to Facebook, claimed that they were found on May 31.

One airline employee, James Hardy, insisted that the potential find is more significant than the wreckage found on Reunion Island, and ‘changes everything’ about the investigation.

‘I and my friends who also work in aviation who have seen these photos all believe they appear to be aircraft parts, due to the honeycomb construction,’ Mr Hardy told the Before It’s News website.

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/04/04/06/27464EEF00000578-3025270-image-a-35_1428123944562.jpg

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/08/09/14/2B39F59E00000578-3191134-image-a-4_1439125317013.jpg

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/08/09/12/2B39B60300000578-3191134-image-a-1_1439120965538.jpg

Find that 'changes everything': Locals claim that debris from the missing MH370 jet washed up on three islands in the Maalhosmadulu Atoll and the Miladhunmadulu Atoll (pictured). The Maldives are located in the Indian Ocean, southwest of India


He added that, if the find can be verified, ‘it would rule out the current search area off Perth as I am certain that the tides and currents could never have pushed it that far'.

Mr Hardy is reported to have added that the location of the debris matches the calculations that he and Quantas pilots had done in relation to fuel endurance.

‘If flown low and slow there was more than enough fuel to reach the Maldives.’

One of the pieces carried, in red, the letters IC. The rest of the letters or numbers have been eroded.

Police are reported to have removed the parts for further analysis.

Further plane debris was reported to have washed up on a beach on the North Male Atoll resort a month ago.

If it is confirmed to belong to the missing Boeing 777, the debris would help the investigation pinpoint exactly where the plane went down.




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