Mozambique
Mozambique and Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370
Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 was a scheduled international flight which left Kuala Lumpur on Saturday, 8 March 2014 at 00:42 am (MYT) and was expected to arrive in Beijing at 6:30 am (MYT).
For reasons that are still not known, the aircraft made a turn-back west across the Malay Peninsula; changed direction again and flew north west towards the Andaman Sea; and then turned south.
Flight MH370 ended in the southern Indian Ocean about 2000 km from Perth , Western Australia.
An international search for the Boeing 777 in the southern Indian Ocean did not locate any debris from MH370 and underwater searches have failed to locate any wreckage of the Boeing 777-200ER.
However, currents in the Indian Ocean carried debris from flight MH370 thousands of kilometers counter-clockwise around the Indian Ocean in an oceanic system known as the Indian Ocean Gyre. Debris which has been confirmed to be from Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 has been recovered in Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, La Réunion Island, South Africa and Tanzania.
Further detail is provided below:-
Debris from Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 recovered in Mozambique
| Ref. | Date Found | Debris | Location | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item 2 | 27 December 2015 |
Right Wing No. 7 Flap Support Fairing |
Daghatane Beach, Mozambique |
|
| Item 3 | 27 February 2016 |
Right Horizontal Stabiliser Panel |
Valankulo, Paluma Sandbank, Mozambique |
|
| Item 6 | 24 April 2016 |
Right Hand Engine Fan Cowling |
South of Chidenguele, Mozambique |
|
| Item 7 | 30 April 2016 |
Wing to Body Fairing |
Anvil Bay, Chemucane, Mozambique |
|
| Item 9 | 22 May 2016 |
Left Wing Trailing Edge Panel |
Macenta Peninsular, Mozambique |
|
| Item 22 | 26 August 2016 |
Right Vertical Stabilizer Panel |
Linga Linga beach Mozambique |
|
Adapted from Table 1.12A - Items of Debris
Source:
Safety Investigation Report MH370/01/2018
1.12 Wreckage and Impact Information
Indian Ocean Gyre
Source: Wikimedia Commons
WMC-IMG-082