Myanmar finds aircraft parts in southern Indian Ocean

June 08, 2017 09:25 am | Updated 09:28 am IST - YANGON

File photo of a Myanmar Air Force Shaanxi Y-8 transport aircraft, similar to the aircraft carrying over 200 people that went missing between the southern city of Myeik and Yangon.

File photo of a Myanmar Air Force Shaanxi Y-8 transport aircraft, similar to the aircraft carrying over 200 people that went missing between the southern city of Myeik and Yangon.

A navy ship found bodies and aircraft parts in the seas off Myanmar while searching Thursday morning for a military transport plane carrying 120 people, a spokesman said.

The Chinese-made Y-8 turboprop aircraft carrying 120 people disappeared on Wednesday afternoon about a half-hour after leaving Myeik, also known as Mergui, for Yangon on a route that would have taken it over the Andaman Sea.

Nine naval ships, five army aircraft and three helicopters were searching for the plane, military officials have said.

Gen. Myat Min Oo said the ship found two life jackets, three bodies and a tire that was part of an aircraft wheel. The bodies were of a man, a woman and a child. The wreckage was found in the sea west of the town of Laung Lone.

The plane carried 106 passengers mostly families of military personnel and 14 crew members. It is not unusual for such flights to carry civilians to offset transportation costs for military families stationed in the somewhat remote south.

The spokesman said it was raining, but not heavily, at the time the plane disappeared.

An announcement posted on the Facebook page of the commander of the military, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, said contact was lost when the plane was believed to be about 32 kilometres to the west of Dawei, formerly known as Tavoy.

The military said Myanmar received the Y-8 plane in March last year, and since then it had logged 809 flying hours.

The area is about 700 kilometres north of the last primary radar contact with Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which vanished on a flight from Malaysia to Beijing on March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board. That plane is believed to have flown far off course and crashed into a remote area of the southern Indian Ocean.

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