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MH370: Malaysia asks US for undersea surveillance gear

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Malaysia on Friday asked the United States to provide undersea surveillance technology to help in the search for the wreckage of a missing airliner, Pentagon officials said.

The request came as a near two-week search failed to find any debris from the Boeing 777 that disappeared off the radar after taking off from Kuala  Lumpur on March 8.

In a phone call to Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel, Malaysia’s Defence Minister  and Acting Transport Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein “requested that the US  consider providing some undersea surveillance equipment,” Pentagon spokesman  Rear Admiral John Kirby said.

Hagel assured his counterpart that he would “assess the availability and  utility of military undersea technology for such a task and provide him an  update in the very near future,” Kirby said in a statement.

Officials did not say precisely what equipment the Pentagon might provide  but the US military has invested heavily in robotic technology designed for  undersea surveillance against enemy submarines or torpedoes.

The Malaysian minister thanked Hagel for the US Navy’s assistance in the  search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which disappeared with 239 passengers  and crew in an unprecedented aviation mystery.

Two US Navy maritime surveillance planes, a P-3 Orion and P-8 Poseidon,  have been taking part in the search.

The P-8 has flown with Australian aircraft in a search of the southern  Indian Ocean, while the P-3 —- which had been combing an area in the Bay of  Bengal — is due to join the search in the southern zone, officials said.

A search effort on Friday of a remote stretch of Indian Ocean concluded  “without any sightings,” the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) said  in a statement.

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