MH370 search to end next week: Malaysian minister
No sign of the plane was found in a 120,000 square km sea search zone and the Australian-led hunt was suspended in January 2017.
Kuala Lumpur: The search for flight MH370 will end next week, Malaysia's transport minister said on Wednesday, more than four years after the plane disappeared and triggered one of the world's greatest aviation mysteries.
The Malaysia Airlines jet vanished in March 2014 with 239 people -- mostly from China -- on board, en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
No sign of the plane was found in a 120,000 square kilometre (46,000 square mile) sea search zone and the Australian-led hunt, the largest in aviation history, was suspended in January 2017.
After pressure from family members, the former Malaysian government struck a deal with US exploration firm Ocean Infinity to restart the search on the condition it would only be paid if the jet or its black boxes were found.
The firm, which deployed hi-tech underwater drones in its hunt, stood to make up to $70 million if successful.
Malaysia's Transport Minister Anthony Loke, part of the new government that came to power following May 9 elections, said the hunt was officially meant to finish in April but had been extended, and would come to an end next week.
"The search will continue until May 29," he told reporters.
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad had said earlier that the contract with Ocean Infinity was being reviewed.
Grace Nathan, a Malaysian lawyer whose mother Anne Daisy was on the plane, said the news was not a surprise but said the government should leave the "no find, no fee" offer on the table in case a company wants to take on the search in future.
"We can't tell (the government) what to do but for me and the families... finding the plane is important for many reasons," she said.
The new hunt started late January in an area of about 25,000 square kilometres in the southern Indian Ocean, north of the former search area.
The ship conducting the hunt, Seabed Constructor, was a Norwegian research vessel carrying 65 crew, including two members of the Malaysian navy as the government's representatives.
It used eight autonomous drones, equipped with sonars and cameras, that scoured the waters for wreckage and can operate in depths up to 6,000 metres (20,000 feet).
However it did not find any sign of the jet.
Only three confirmed fragments of MH370 have been found, all of them on western Indian Ocean shores, including a two-metre wing part known as a flaperon.