A Seychelles find of debris from what appears to be part of an aircraft engine cover possibly came from the general direction where other parts of MH370 have been found in Indian Ocean countries.
Updated: Malaysia says Seychelles debris not from missing flight 370. Civil aviation chief Azharuddin Abdul Rahman said in a statement today that investigators have analysed photographs of the debris and confirmed it did not come from a Boeing 777 or from a Rolls-Royce engine, the type used on MH370.
Seychelles reported on Thursday the discovery of two pieces of debris that seemed to be from an aircraft and said it had notified Malaysia, whose Flight MH370 vanished in 2014 with 239 people aboard.
The Seychelles Civil Aviation Authority (SCAA) said scientists researching birds and turtles had found the debris washed up on Farqhar, one of the islands that make up the tropical Indian Ocean nation.
“The direction of flow of the sea currents make it likely that the (debris) came from the general direction where other parts (of MH370) have been found in Indian Ocean countries,” a senior SCAA official who asked not to be named told Reuters.
Michael Payet, a spokesman for the state agency that manages all Seychelles islands, said the largest of the two bits of debris was about 120 cm (3.94 feet) long and 30 cm (one foot) wide and appeared to be made of aluminium and carbon fibre.
“It could be part of an engine cover,” he said.
The SCAA was in contact with Malaysian authorities, ”who have shown an interest, and with whom we expect to work closely”, the aviation authority said in a statement.
Few traces of the Boeing 777 airliner have turned up over more than three years of searching since it disappeared in March 2014 with 239 passengers and crew aboard soon after take-off from Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian capital, bound for Beijing.