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INVESTIGATORS have suspended the last-ditch search effort to find the doomed MH370 plane that vanished more than a decade ago.
Malaysian authorities said they were forced to stop the search operation due to bad weather conditions.




Transport Minister Anthony Loke said: “They have stopped the operation for the time being, they will resume the search at the end of this year.
“Right now, it’s not the season.”
MH370 carrying 239 people disappeared from radar screens on March 8, 2014, while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
Despite the largest search in aviation history, the plane has not yet been found.
Loke’s comments come just a month after Malaysian authorities announced a fresh hunt for the doomed jet.
After years of stalled efforts, the government finally approved Ocean Infinity’s latest search.
And the plan was to cover a vast 15,000 sq km (5,790 sq miles) area in the southern Indian Ocean.
The deep-sea exploration company deployed its advanced mothership, the Armada 7806, to a recently discovered high-priority area located 1,200 miles off the coast of Perth, Australia.
This is the fourth major search for MH370 to have failed.
Experts warned the mission could be the final attempt to find the wreckage — unless new evidence emerges.
A mystery that won’t die
Less than an hour after takeoff, MH370 vanished from the radars and deviated dramatically from its planned route.
Despite an international search costing £120 million, no sign of the Boeing 777 was ever found.
Speculations have been rampant since the event. Investigators suspect that the aircraft concluded its journey in the southern Indian Ocean, yet the causes behind its disappearance are still a mystery.
Some experts suspect the pilot deliberately took it off course, while conspiracy theories range from a hijacking cover-up to military intervention.
An official 2018 report concluded that “the answer can only be conclusive if the wreckage is found.”
Why is MH370 still missing a decade on?
By Rebecca Husselbee, Assistant Foreign Editor
When an entire plane with 239 passengers mysteriously disappeared from the sky it left the world in utter disbelief – myself included.
How is it possible for an entire aircraft to disappear without a trace in today’s world where every movement on land, sea, and air is monitored? And how has it stayed undiscovered for ten years?
Having spent the last few years exploring the many theories on what MH370’s final moments might look like, from the bizarre to the complex, there is one hypothesis that answers every question for me.
Pilot Simon Hardy has left no stone unturned in his search for answers and having been at the helm of passenger flights for over 20 years he knows every inch of a Boeing 777 cockpit.
What makes his “technique, not a theory” even more compelling is his ability to access the world’s best flight simulators and sit in Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah’s seat as he commandeered the Malaysia Airlines and flew into the middle of the Southern Indian Ocean.
While others believe WSPR technology holds the key to finally discovering the wreckage, it’s never been proven and many in the MH370 community have questioned its reliability.
Many experts agree that the “suicidal” MH370 pilot was behind the plane’s demise – what we’ll never know is what his mindset was on that night and what motive he had to carry out such a chilling plan.
Passenger safety onboard in the aviation industry is rigorous and the likelihood of travellers being involved in a plane crash is 1 in 11 million.
But are airlines considering a pilot’s mental state when they sit at the controls of a jet that could be turned into a 300-ton death machine?
