Malaysia minister confirms jet search area expanded

Malaysia minister confirms jet search area expanded

KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia confirmed Friday that the search for a missing Malaysia Airlines plane had been expanded into the Indian Ocean, but declined to comment on US reports that the jet had flown for hours after going missing.

"The aircraft is still missing, and the search area is expanding," said Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein.

"Together with our international partners, we are pushing further east into the South China Sea and further into the Indian Ocean," he added.

Stressing that he could offer no new information on what happened to Flight MH370 which disappeared last Saturday, Hussein refused to address US media reports, citing unidentified US officials, that the Boeing 777 had flown for an additional four or five hours after vanishing from civilian radar.

"We do not want to be drawn into specific remarks that unnamed officials have reportedly made in the media," he said.

"We want nothing more than to find the plane as quickly as possible. But the circumstances have forced us to widen our search," he added.

The US reports were based on information that the plane's communication system continued to "ping" a satellite for up to four hours after it disappeared en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

A US Navy official said the destroyer USS Kidd was being sent to the Indian Ocean - on the opposite side of the Malaysian peninsula from where contact was lost - to investigate.

But Hussein insisted that the main reason for widening the search field was the failure to locate the plane in the areas searched so far.

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