Second possible MH370 plane part found on La Reunion
Johnny Begue, who found the 'flaperon' part while cleaning a beach last July, said he handed over the new suspected object to police.
Saint-Denis De La Reunion: A resident on the French Indian Ocean island of La Reunion who last year found a wing fragment from Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 said on Sunday that he had come across a second possible piece from the missing plane.
Johnny Begue, who found the “flaperon” part while cleaning a beach last July, said he handed over the new suspected object to police immediately after finding it last Thursday.
He said he was out jogging by the sea shore when he found the object measuring about 40 by 20 centimetres, which had a blue mark on the surface and was grey underneath.
Begue said it was of the same lightweight “honeycomb” construction as the flaperon piece.
The flaperon he found remains the only piece of debris identified with certainty as having come from the plane. Begue said he has been combing the island’s shores ever since.
“When there’s bad weather is when you should look, when the sea tosses up a lot of stuff,” he said.
Police have not contacted Begue since he handed over the new object on Thursday, he said.
The Gendarmerie Brigade for Air Transport the police unit which investigated the first find could not immediately be reached by AFP for comment.
MH370, a Boeing 777, was carrying 239 passengers and crew when it vanished on March 8, 2014, on an overnight flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
Begue’s reported find came three days after an American amateur investigator found suspected MH370 debris in Mozambique, some 2,100 kilometres west of Reunion.
That object, which is about a metre long, has been sent to Australia for expert analysis.
Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said last Wednesday that initial information indicated a “high possibility” it came from a Boeing 777.
An international team of investigators probing the loss of flight MH370 will issue a statement on Tuesday, the second anniversary of the plane’s disappearance.
The unprecedented Australian-led hunt for wreckage from the flight is expected to finish its high-tech scanning of a designated swathe of seafloor in the remote Indian Ocean by July.
Australian, Malaysian and Chinese authorities plan to end the search -- projected to cost up to $130 million at that point if no new concrete leads emerge.