France deploys MH370 search planes as families push for answers

France is to launch new air, land and sea searches around Reunion Island to try and find more wreckage from MH370. News of the deployment came as relatives of passengers aboard the flight staged a noisy and emotional protest in Beijing. They shouted, chanted, and knelt on the ground crying, demanding more action from Malaysia and information about their missing loved ones. France said it was ramping up its search off the coast of the French-governed island after Malaysia confirmed a piece of wing debris was from MH370.

We have decided to deploy additional aerial and maritime assets to search for potential new debris off Reunion Island.

France’s Defence Ministry

The French decision came as Malaysia also appealed to the governments of Mauritius and Madagascar east of Reunion to help widen the search area. However, the request to extend the original search area in the southern Indian Ocean is likely to meet with resistance in Australia. The country has largely funded the search effort and is opposed to expanding expensive underwater searches without strong evidence. The Boeing 777 disappeared in March last year en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew on board, most of them Chinese. A piece of wing known as a flaperon was found on a Reunion beach last week.