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The Malaysian government says it has agreed in principle to resume the search for a passenger jet that vanished 10 years ago in one of aviation’s greatest mysteries.
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 disappeared in March 2014 while on its way to Beijing, China, from Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia with 239 people on board.
Efforts to locate the wreckage of the Boeing 777 have sputtered over the years and hundreds of families of those on board remain haunted by the tragedy.
On Friday, Malaysia’s transport minister Anthony Loke said the cabinet approved in principle a $70m (£56m) deal with US-based marine exploration firm Ocean Infinity to find the aircraft.
Under a “no find, no fee” arrangement, Ocean Infinity will get paid only when the wreckage is found.
A 2018 search for the MH370 wreckage by Ocean Infinity under similar terms ended unsuccessfully after three months.
A multinational effort that cost $150m (£120m) ended in 2017 after two years of scouring vast waters. The governments of the three nations involved – Malaysia, Australia and China – said the search would only be resumed “should credible new evidence emerge” of the aircraft’s location.
While the government has “in principle” accepted Ocean Infinity’s offer, Loke said negotiations over specific terms of the deal were s
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