The Hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 Has Resumed—Here’s What We Know About the Plane That Vanished into Thin Air
Just after midnight on March 8, 2014, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 took off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport heading to Beijing. It was a routine red-eye route for the Boeing 777, but what started as a commonplace flight soon became one of the biggest mysteries in aviation history. Less than an hour after takeoff, MH370 lost radar contact as it crossed into Vietnamese-controlled airspace. The plane and all 239 people on board were never seen or heard from again . “For years, I have been asking, ‘What do you mean by lost contact?'” Li Eryou, whose son disappeared on the flight, told the BBC . “It seems to me that if you lose contact with someone, you should be able to reconnect with them.” Authorities tried, kicking off a multinational, multiyear search via air, sea and deep-sea sonar mapping. But neither government nor private search-and-rescue teams have been able to locate the wreckage. With questions mounting and answers in short supply, the strange disappearance ha...