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Obama says US committed to assist 'laborious' search for MH370

Says United States is absolutely committed to providing whatever resources and assets required in the hunt

Barack Obama

Press Trust of India Kuala Lumpur/Perth
President Barack Obama today said the US was "absolutely committed" to provide more assets in the "laborious" hunt for the Malaysian jet in the Indian Ocean where a robotic mini-sub expanded its search area after failing to locate any wreckage despite 14 missions.

"I can tell you the United States is absolutely committed to providing whatever resources and assets that we can," Obama told a news conference here with Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak.

"It is a very challenging effort, a laborious effort and it is going to take some time," said Obama, who arrived in Malaysia yesterday on a three-day official visit.
 

Obama, whose visit to the South East Asian country comes in nearly five decades by a US President, also defended the Najib government over its handling of the search for the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, that mysteriously disappeared on March 8.

The Malaysian government has come under criticism from relatives of the 239 people, including five Indians, aboard the plane for allegedly hiding information and lack of transparency.

Obama urged "full transparency" but said the US and other countries involved in the multinational search for the plane have found the Malaysian government "fully forthcoming with us in terms of the information that they have."

In Perth, Joint Agency Coordination Centre (JACC) leading the search said Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) Bluefin-21 scouring the Indian Ocean seabed for wreckage of the plane has failed to yield results after 14 missions and searching over 95 per cent of the focused underwater search area.

The Bluefin - a US Navy probe equipped with side-scan sonar - is currently completing mission 15 even as the planned air and surface search was suspended for today due to deteriorating weather conditions.

No contacts of interest have been found to date and the robotic mini-submarine is expected to continue examining the areas adjacent to it during mission 15, the JACC said in a statement 51 days after the plane vanished from radar screens.

Obama, whose visit to Malaysia is the first by a sitting US President since President Lyndon B Johnson in 1966, said he "completely understands the heartache the families are going through and want some answers".

Malaysia is the third leg of his four-nation tour of Asia that has taken him to Japan and South Korea.

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First Published: Apr 27 2014 | 3:34 PM IST

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