A report on the almost three-year search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 said Tuesday the continuing mystery over the fate of the plane and the 239 people on board is "almost inconceivable."
For two years, a handful of ships have diligently combed a remote patch of the Indian Ocean west of Australia in a $160 million bid to find Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. On Tuesday, investigators made what was surely a painful admission.
Malaysia's government says two more pieces of debris, discovered in South Africa and Rodrigues Island off Mauritius, are "almost certainly" from Flight 370, which mysteriously disappeared two years ago with 239 people on board.
An American who discovered an aircraft part in Mozambique that may be from missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 says he initially thought it was part of a much smaller plane.
French authorities say a week-long operation has begun on the Indian Ocean island of Reunion to search for debris from the doomed MH370 flight, after part of a wing believed to belong to it was found there last week.
Debris found off the coast of an Indian Ocean island is being examined to see if it's connected to last year's disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. The debris, which is said to resemble a wing flap, has been taken to Reunion Island.
Beachside memorials and religious services are planned across Asia to mark 10 years since the Indian Ocean tsunami slammed into a dozen nations and killed nearly a quarter million people.
Experts will be analyzing what may be the latest signal picked up from a man-made device deep under the Indian Ocean.
Search crews in the Indian Ocean haven't been picking up any more of the faint underwater sounds they were hearing a few days ago.
Five aircraft have spotted objects in the southern Indian Ocean today during the search for debris from the lost Malaysian jetliner.