The search for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 is set to resume over a decade after it disappeared.

The news, which comes after campaigns from family members of the missing, has been confirmed by the Malaysian transport

ministry.

The news comes 11 years after the aircraft first disappeared.

It has remained one of the greatest mysteries in modern aviation history.

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Flight MH370 makes global headlines

Flight MH370 was scheduled to fly from Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia to Beijing in China.

On March 8th, 2014, it veered off-course – and went missing from flight radars forever.

At the time, MH370 was carrying 12 Malaysian staff and 227 passengers.

Since then, the families of those missing have naturally been seeking closure.

And now, attempts to locate the aircraft are being revived.

In a statement on Wednesday, the Malaysian transport ministry confirmed the news.

It also confirmed that Ocean Infinity, a marine robotics company, would be leading the search.

The company, based in the UK and US, is set to resume a search of the Indian Ocean seabed.

Discovery operations are set to start on December 30th and last for 55 days.

The new search will target strategic sectors of the Indian Ocean.

The team will search the areas with the highest likelihood of finding the missing aircraft.

Danica Weeks, whose husband Paul went missing onboard MH370, spoke to The Guardian about the news.

She noted that she is, ‘incredibly grateful and relieved’ that the Malaysian government is continuing the search.

She said: “We’ve never stopped wishing for answers, and knowing the search will go on brings a sense of comfort.

“I truly hope this next phase gives us the clarity and peace we’ve been so desperately longing for, for us and our loved

ones, since March 8th 2014.”

A timeline of the search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370

March 8, 2014: Flight MH370 departs Kuala Lumpur for Beijing and disappears from civilian radar less than an hour later

Military radar shows the aircraft turning west across the Malay Peninsula

March 9–14, 2014: Initial search focuses on the South China Sea before shifting west toward the Andaman Sea

15th March, 2014: Satellite data reveals the aircraft flew for hours after radar lost contact, prompting a search in two

corridors: north toward Central Asia and south into the Indian Ocean

March 24, 2014: Malaysia’s Prime Minister announces that new satellite analysis indicates the flight ended in the

southern Indian Ocean

April 4–14, 2014: Search vessels detect possible underwater pings, though later results are inconclusive

July 29, 2015: A flaperon from MH370 is found on Réunion Island, the first confirmed debris

2015–2016: Additional debris confirmed or considered likely from MH370 is discovered along western Indian Ocean shores

January 17, 2017: The official joint search by Malaysia, Australia, and China is suspended after covering 120,000 sq km

without locating the main wreckage

January 2018: A new search by Ocean Infinity begins under a ‘no find, no fee’ agreement with Malaysia

May 2018: The Ocean Infinity search ends with no new confirmed findings

2020–2023: Independent investigators, analysts, and family groups continue research and advocacy for a renewed search