An Australian-led Indian Ocean hunt for wreckage from the Malaysia Airlines plane is expected to finish scouring a designated deep-sea zone by July, and authorities plan to end the search if nothing is found.
But Voice370, an international next-of-kin network, issued a statement today pleading with the governments involved to keep searching until something is found.
"Voice370 urges authorities to press on and search on in the current search area," said Voice370.
The statement was issued just days ahead of the second anniversary of the flight's mysterious March 8, 2014 disappearance.
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Voice370 said families' pain had not eased with the passage of two "agonising" years.
"The festering wounds of loss and 'not knowing' have made the task of initiating even the first steps towards 'moving on' practically impossible for family members," it said.
Continuing the search also "would help make aviation safer" if the disaster's cause can eventually be identified.
Experts believe it somehow detoured to the remote southern Indian Ocean, where it went down.
But the huge and costly search effort, which also involves Malaysian and Chinese assets, has found no wreckage on the sea floor.
Authorities hope finding a crash site could lead to recovery of the Boeing 777's black boxes and possibly clues to what happened.
A piece of suspected plane debris was found this week on the coast of Mozambique, thousands of kilometres from the search zone, and will be analysed in Australia for any link to MH370, officials said.