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Sex crims 'should have penis removed'

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 21 Maret 2014 | 22.16

One of WA's worst sex offenders has been arrested after he allegedly breached a supervision order.

Child Protection Minister Robyn McSweeney and Department for Child Protection's Director General Terry Murphy discuss aspects of the toddler in Princess Margaret Hospital for Children. Source: News Limited

A WEST Australian Liberal backbencher has stood by her comment in parliament that serial sex offenders should "have their penis removed with a blunt instrument".

There has been public uproar since a man known only as TJD was freed from prison last week by a Supreme Court judge under a strict 10-year supervision order.

Commissioner Kevin Sleight's decision ended an indefinite detention order handed to TJD in 2011 following vicious assaults on more than a dozen women over 23 years and his psychological assessment as a sexual sadist with psychopathic tendencies.

Liberal backbencher Robyn McSweeney today stood by her comment made in parliament this week that chemical castration did not always work for sex offenders and "people like this should have their penis removed with a blunt instrument".

"Obviously, I am a legislator and that is not going to happen, but when we see the damage that this man inflicts on women and children, there is no place for people like this to walk among us in society," she told parliament.

"If I get into trouble for saying that, so be it, because I am not the first one to say things like that." TJD was arrested on Wednesday — eight days after being released — for allegedly breaching a reporting condition and was bailed before he appears in Perth Magistrates Court next week.

He is believed to have not brought a diary to a meeting with police.

Ms McSweeny said today she was still "very angry" that TJD was released from prison and expected him to breach parole again. "I hope that he breaches his bail by cutting off his ankle bracelet and then they can put him back inside (prison)," Ms McSweeney told 6PR radio.

"He doesn't seem to have any moral conscience."

Attorney-General Michael Mischin has ordered a review of WA's Dangerous Sexual Offenders Act in light of TJD's release.

High-profile lawyers Tom Percy and Linda Black backed Mr Sleight, saying he was an experienced judge who was not lenient.


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Super sleuths looking for MH370 clues

The federal govt is warning it may take days to find the objects thought to be wreckage from flight MH370.

What could it be ... the largest object estimated at 24 metres long spotted in the Indian Ocean. Picture: AFP/Australian Government's Department of Defence via the Australian Maritime Safety Authority Source: AFP

SUPER sleuths employed by the government's highly secretive Australian Geospatial-Intelligence Organisation (AGO) will spend coming days poring over high-resolution satellite photographs searching for clues about the fate of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.

The imagery specialists — who can spot an open window from space — identified the flotsam in the southern Indian Ocean which led Prime Minister Tony Abbott to spark fresh hope that one of the world's greatest aviation mysteries might soon be solved.

Official information about the organisation is hard to find, but it is understood to employ several hundred people located in a historic building and attached high-security facility at Bendigo in Victoria and in a bunker at Defence Headquarters at Russell Offices in Canberra.

About a quarter of AGO's staff are analysts whose job it is to examine digital images from aircraft, drones, satellites or other sources that could be as varied as an insurgent stronghold in Afghanistan, an illegal people smuggling or fishing boat in Northern Australia or a small piece of floating debris in the Indian Ocean.

The analysts undertake an intensive six-month course to learn how to examine aerial or satellite photographs and to see what lies behind the image.

"They can tell

Unidentified objects ... satellite images taken by provider DigitalGlobe on March 16, 2014 show objects in the Indian Ocean which may be from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. Picture: AFP/Australian Government's Department of Defence via the Australian Maritime Safety Authority. Source: AFP

whether the windows on a hut in Afghanistan open up or out or whether a door opens in or out or the height of the branches on a tree in the yard," said intelligence expert Professor Des Ball.

Imagery comes into AGO from numerous commercial and highly classified government sources such as spy satellites orbiting the earth every 90 minutes or so.

The images that provided fresh impetus to the world's most bizarre airline mystery were taken by a commercial American satellite on March 16. The company's DigitalGlobe WorldView-2 satellite imagery comes with a resolution of about 50cm.

Operating from 770km up in space the 2800kg "bird" can collect imagery across one million square kms of the earth's surface every day.

Its altitude explains the grainy nature of the satellite images released to the world's media that appear to show a 24-metre long piece of debris floating just below the surface.

"We can confirm that DigitalGlobe has provided imagery to search officials in Australia, and we have been informed by an Australian government official that it was our imagery Prime Minister Abbott referred to in his recent comments," the company said.

"No conclusions have been reached about the origins of the debris or objects shown in the imagery, and we are not aware that any subsequent search missions have been able to locate it."

According to Professor Ball the next step is for the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to task its high-resolution KH-11 low earth orbit imagery satellite to focus on any fresh images from the search area.

The images captured by DigitalGlobal were taken on March 16 and the debris would have drifted hundreds of kilometres since then.

The CIA "bird" orbits at 120km above the earth and can provide resolution down to six cms over an area to 80 degrees south.

It circles the globe roughly every 90 minutes or 17 times in 24 hours, but is of no use in a wide area search or in darkness or cloudy weather.

The spy satellite needs to be focused on a specific area to be able to find the target and provide high-res imagery. That means one of the dozen or more commercial imagery satellites in orbit would need to locate the debris and then pass the coordinates to the KH-11 bird so it can snap away during future passes over the area.

Once captured by the CIA satellite the high-res digital images would be sent to AGO for analysis with details passed to search co-ordinators and eventually to aircraft and ships in the search zone.

As it has unfolded, the mystery of missing flight MH370 and the incredible twists and turns in world news coverage so far

None of the CIA imagery would be publicly released because it would provide America's enemies with vital clues about its capabilities.

Australia has no indigenous satellite capability primarily because the government negotiates high-level access to US signals intelligence and imagery birds thanks to the presence of the top-secret CIA ground station at Pine Gap near Alice Springs.

This unique facility is run by the CIA even though it deals with signals intelligence which is normally under the wing of the US National Security Agency (NSA).

The Australian Geospatial-Intelligence Organisation's mission is "to provide geospatial intelligence from imagery and other sources in support of Australia's defence and national interests."

"Imagery is not going to solve this mystery, it will only be solved when the debris is retrieved and identified," Professor Ball said.

Australian National University senior fellow and former intelligence officer John Blaxland said in his view the satellite images showed a large ISO shipping container. The containers come in six, 12 and 24 metre lengths.

"It could be part of an empty wing but it looks more rectangular like a semi-submerged shipping container," he said.

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Woman struck by lightning

A woman was struck by lightning near Bruce Rock. Picture: File image/Mark Finley Source: Supplied

A WOMAN in her 20s is in a serious condition in a Perth hospital tonight after she was struck by lightning in the Wheatbelt.

The woman, reportedly a German backpacker working for a shearing contractor near the small town of Bruce Rock, was struck by lightning this morning at about 9am.

The Royal Flying Doctor Service picked her up from Bruce Rock and airlifted her to Perth. She arrived at Royal Perth Hospital at about 2pm.

A RPH spokeswoman said tonight the woman was in a serious condition and still being assessed in the emergency department.

The extent of her injuries are unknown at this stage.

Lightning strikes cut power to thousands of homes in Perth early this morning in the first autumn storm.


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Arrests end stolen car ram manhunt

Police are searching western Perth suburbs for two men who allegedly rammed a police vehicle with a stolen car and left a police officer with broken ribs. Picture: File image Source: News Limited

POLICE have arrested a group of males in the end to a dramatic western suburbs manhunt sparked when a police vehicle was allegedly rammed with a stolen car and an officer assaulted.

Police say they found three men in a park at the corner of Peel Place and Cardigan Terrace in Jolimont and took them into custody.

Nine News reported a fourth man was arrested in a nearby backyard.

The men were allegedly travelling in a car that rammed a police vehicle on Halesworth Road in Jolimont about 2.50pm today.

Police say one man had been apprehended and handcuffed by police officers when the second man, who police were attempting to arrest, allegedly assaulted a police officer.

Both men then escaped police.

A constable has been taken to Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital with suspected broken ribs.

Anyone with information is asked to call police on 131 444.


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Searchers vow to find missing plane

The crew from the RAAF P3 Orion have returned today with no positive sighting of anything significant. Courtesy: Sky News

Retired US Air Force Lt. Col. Ken Christensen says the possible wreckage of MH370 can definitely be recovered if it is located off the coast of Australia. Courtesy Fox News

Satellite images of objects in the Indian Ocean which may be from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 which disappeared en route to Beijing early on March 8. Source: AFP

THE first plane sent on Friday to fly over one of the remotest places on earth returned empty-handed from its hunt through rough seas for objects that may be from the missing Malaysia Airlines plane, Australian officials said.

The RAAF P3 Orion landed in Perth shortly before 7.30pm (AEDT).

The aircraft's pilot Flight Lieutenant Russell Adams remained upbeat about finding the potential MH370 debris, saying "really good weather" has provided "good opportunities".

"We have lots of hope," he said.

"Hopefully we will find something."

Meanwhile, Malaysia's Minister of Defence and Acting Minister of Transport Hishammuddin Hussein said they had enlisted help from the man who led the investigation into the Air France Flight 447 crash.

"He has agreed to assist us with his considerable experience and expertise,'' he said.

Mr Hussein said he will also speak to his American counterpart about accessing locaters or hydrophones.

Only a few countries have them, including the US, and they help to locate any pings coming from the plane's flight data recorders.

He will also ask the US about sending re-fuelling ships so that seach planes can refuel at sea rather than fly the fours there and back to the search zone.

Describing the hunt for the missing plane as one of "global" proportions and the biggest in the world, Mr Hussein said: "The most sophisticated assets, aircraft and vessels are heading in that direction ... yes it is a challenge but we are using every possible asset and equipment that is available to the world out there to locate the aircraft."

"I will also be speaking to US Secretary of Defence at 21:15 tonight [Friday] to request several specialist assets to help with the search and rescue effort including remotely operated vehicles for deep ocean salvage."

Mr Hussein confirmed Kazakhstan authorities found no trace of MH370 there.

"The Kazakhstan authorities have assured us they have not found any trace of MH370 and we are awaiting permission for Kazakhstan to be used as a staging point for search operations,'' Mr Hussein said.

WHAT MISSING FLIGHT MH370 HAS TAUGHT THE WORLD

Mr Hussein said Malaysia was still awaiting information from the Australian search and rescue operation as to whether the objects shown in the satellite images released by Australia on Thursday were indeed related to MH370.

In the meantime, he said Malaysia would continue its search and rescue operations in the rest of the southern and northern corridors.

"Search efforts southwest of Perth continue, and the Australian authorities are intensifying their efforts in the area. HMAS Success is due to reach the vicinity of the objects tomorrow (Saturday)," he said.

"China has deployed five ships and three ship-borne helicopters, which are currently heading toward the southern corridor. Three Chinese aircraft (2 Ilyushin IL-76s and 1 Shaanxi Y-8) arrived in Malaysia at 11am this morning (Friday). They will also be searching in the southern corridor.

"Japan is deploying its assets to Perth, including 2 P-3 Orions, to assist with the Australian search efforts."

Mr Hussein said that the British HMS Echo was already heading towards the southern Indian Ocean to support the search effort.

On the police investigation, Mr Hussein said the Ukraine police had confirmed that the background checks on the Ukrainian passenger had come back clear.

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority's John Young said the five aircraft searching the southern Indian Ocean yesterday were flying low in favourable weather with trained observers looking for signs since they did not detect anything with radar on Thursday.

"Tomorrow's (Saturday's) plan is actually to do the same thing again," he said.

"We will move the search area to where the water has moved overnight."

Acting Prime Minister Warren Truss confirmed late today that two Chinese aircraft were due to arrive in Perth tomorrow and two Japanese aircraft will join the search on Sunday.

Mr Truss, who will tomorrow visit the RAAF Pearce air base where the search is being co-ordinated, said the worldwide effort to find the plane would widen over the weekend.

He voiced a warning that given the satellite images were now five days old, there was some possibility whatever had been there had sunk or moved.

However, he added: "This is the only lead in the world right now — and there is a real prospect the aircraft was in this area, so we must take this search seriously.''

A briefing for the relatives of those on board MH370 was held in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday night.

"We had a very constructive and frank discussion. Although we answered most of the questions they raised, we could not answer them all. These briefings will continue — at the families' convenience — for as long as the families want them,'' Mr Hussein said.

"The briefing brought the families and the Malaysian authorities closer together, not just in terms of sharing information, but also in terms of listening to the voice of the family members. The Prime Minister's Special Envoy to China will be co-ordinating the briefings in Kuala Lumpur from now on.

"The high-level team I announced yesterday arrived in Beijing last night. Today they met with family members for three and half hours."

THE SEARCH CONTINUES

Another three RAAF planes — two more Orions and an ultra-long-range Bombardier Global Express — were still scouring the area 2300 kilometres from Western Australia trying to solve the nearly two-week-old mystery, of flight MH370 and another was on the way to look for two large objects a satellite detected floating off the southwest coast of Australia about halfway to the desolate islands of the Antarctic.

The area in the southern Indian Ocean is so remote is takes the RAAF P3 Orion four hours to fly there and four hours back, and leaves them only about two hours to search.

The satellite discovery raised new hope of finding the vanished jet and sent another emotional jolt to the families of the 239 people aboard.

News Corp photographer Justin Benson-Cooper was on board an RAAF P-3 Orion Friday as it scoured the area where the satellite imagery detected debris.

Benson-Cooper said they spent about two hours, searching on a grid pattern, trying to spot the mysterious objects which were bobbing just below the surface on March 16.

"The visibility was good so we got down to 500 feet and did four passes," he said.

"We saw a fishing net which we thought might be something but when we turned around it was just a fishing net.

"We went over the Norwegian tanker and past the US aircraft but that was about all we saw unfortunately.

"When we got to the point where we were going to run out of gas we turned back."

"We could tell a lot of (the crew) were very tired because they'd been up since 3am and they'd been out the day before but they're very professional and obviously really thorough.

"Two guys would be on the radars and two guys on the portholes and after a certain amount of time they'd switch so it didn't become too mundane.

"They had the attitude that 'we've got a job to do and we're out here to do it'. There was definitely a sense of needing to find answers for the families of the passengers. They were doing it for them."

The United States Navy P8 Poseidon aircraft has departed for the search area and China is sending three warships and an icebreaker to join the search, the government said.

The National Maritime Search and Rescue Centre said three warships were en route to the area west of Australia.

It gave no indication when they might arrive at the remote site, but earlier reports said the ships — the Kunlunshan, the Haikou and the Qiandaohu — were searching this week off the southwest coast of Sumatra in Indonesia.

INSIDE THE SEARCH FOR MISSING FLIGHT MH370

The Chinese icebreaker Snow Dragon was preparing to leave Perth in Western Australia for the search site, state television reported. The ship was in Perth following a voyage to Antarctica in January.

As it has unfolded, the mystery of missing flight MH370 and the incredible twists and turns in world news coverage so far

Also today, three Chinese military planes left the southern city of Sanya for Malaysia to join the search, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

One merchant vessel is currently in the search area. A second merchant vessel was due to arrive Friday night.

The satellite images — deemed the "best lead" in the mystery which has gripped the world for the past 14 days — have given fresh impetus to the search efforts.

Lisa Martin, spokeswoman for the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, said weather conditions were getting better as the day wore on, with moderate seas and some cloud cover, and improving visibility.

"We will find it — I'm sure about that piece of it. The only reason we wouldn't find it was that it has sunk,'' said Mike Yardley, an Air Commodore with New Zealand's air force, of the large unidentified object spotted by the satellite.

"I've been on these missions before when it's taken a few days to come across it.''

Speaking at a news conference in Papua New Guinea, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said, "We've been throwing everything we've got at that area to try to learn more about what this debris might be.

"It's about the most inaccessible spot that you could imagine on the face of the earth, but if there is anything down there we will find it. We owe it to the families of those people to do no less.".

FLIGHT MH370 PILOT'S MYSTERY PHONE CALL

China's President Xi Jinping is "devastated'' by the mysterious disappearance of flight MH370, Mr Abbott said today after a phone call between the two.

Relatives of Chinese passengers on board MH370 vented their fury on Friday in their first meeting in Beijing with Malaysian government officials, almost two weeks after the aircraft vanished.

The event began in angry fashion, with family members yelling at the group of political representatives and senior military officials to stand up when they were being introduced, rather than nodding while sitting down.

"You have wasted so much time," one anguished relative shouted, his voice quivering.

The Malaysian delegation arrived in Beijing late on Thursday after repeated, angry demands by relatives for an opportunity to question Kuala Lumpur officials about the search and rescue operation.

Previous daily meetings at the hotel have been with representatives of Malaysia Airlines, and the relatives have been growing increasingly frustrated by the lack of answers.

Relatives have been speaking of hunger strikes and demonstrations in recent days

"As you can understand (President Xi Jinping) is devastated, as are so many people in China, as is (Malaysian) Prime Minister Najib (Razak) by all of this," Mr Abbott said following their call last night, which came after Australia detected possible debris from the plane.

Search for lost plane ... Royal Australian Air Force loadmasters, Sergeant Adam Roberts (left) and Flight Sergeant John Mancey, launch a Self Locating Data Marker Buoy from a C-130J Hercules aircraft in the southern Indian Ocean. Source: Supplied

If the debris spotted in the southern Indian Ocean is found to be from the missing plane, it could have drifted more than 500 kilometres from the crash site, a Perth oceanographer said.

Professor Chari Pattiaratchi, of the University of Western Australia, said the searchers face the world's most treacherous seas, and a wreckage recovery operation would be extremely challenging.

The 23,000-square-kilometre search area is in a body of water known as the Roaring Forties, where strong circumpolar westerly winds blow.

Waves of four metres to five metres are constant, but can swell to more than 10 metres during a storm.

"It is as hostile as it can get,'" Prof Pattiaratchi told ABC radio.

"Because of the strong winds, the waves are always breaking, so it's white-capping all the time, so to distinguish between whether it's part of the debris or a wave breaking ... it is quite a challenging system.

"Water depths are up to five kilometres deep, so even if you find something, it's a big challenge to recover it."

He said there were only five or so vessels in the world - remotely operated vehicles or submersibles usually tethered to a ship - that could reach such depths.

If the debris captured in images taken on March 16 and publicly revealed yesterday were found to be part of the missing aircraft, the pieces could have drifted more than 500km to the east of the crash site, Prof Pattiaratchi said.

"We actually have computer models that we can try to run backwards in time to be able to find out where the debris may have come from."

Helping in search for missing plane ... Crew members load supplies onto Chinese Antarctic research icebreaker Xue Long as it prepares to depart Fremantle Habour. Source: AFP

Of the 239 passengers and crew on the Kuala Lumpur-Beijing flight, 153 were Chinese citizens.

THE SEARCH

"Tomorrow's plan is actually to do the same thing again,'' said the Australian Maritime Safety Authority's John Young this afternoon.

"We will move the search area to where the water has moved overnight."

They will be also looking to see if they can get more satellite imagery to refine the search.

"But the plan is we want to find these objects because they are the best lead where we might find people to be rescued ... we are still focused on that task," he said.

One advantage of the RAAF P-3 Orion is that it can fly at low altitudes for long periods. Commodore Yardley said the Orion flew at just 60 metres above the water to stay below thick clouds and fog - which requires intense concentration by the two pilots.

The Orion has a crew of 13, some of whom are stationed on an observation deck to search. As well as using their eyesight, Commodore Yardley said they also use a state-of-the-art radar system and three cameras - one infrared, one long-range, and one high resolution.

The combination of systems helps them detect almost anything that's on the surface, he said. The crew also films everything so they can review what they've seen after they return to base.

The Orion comes equipped with a sonar system for searching below sea level, although it's not being used in this search, Commodore Yardley said.

"We owe it to the families of those people" ... Prime Minister Tony Abbott's message to relatives of passengers from the missing flight as they wait for new information at a hotel in Beijing. Source: AFP

Other planes used in the search on Friday include a US Navy P-8 Poseidon, which has been designed for anti-submarine warfare, and a civilian Bombardier Global Express, a long-range corporate jet with state emergency service observers on board.

The Norwegian cargo vessel Hoegh St. Petersburg arrived in the area late Thursday and used lights to search overnight. The Filipino crew of 20 was planning to use binoculars and their eyesight to scour the water. The ship had been carrying a load of cars from South Africa to Australia before being asked to join in the search.

Another commercial ship was due to arrive Friday.

Any plane debris that is found will be transported back by the Australian navy ship the HMAS Success, which is due to arrive at the search site on Saturday.

A New Zealand Orion plane dropped two buoys yesterday that will help searchers figure out where any debris might drift. Searchers were also planning to drop more buoys from a C-130 Hercules military transport plane.

The buoys resemble a poster tube, each about 1 metre long, with an antenna that transmits a GPS signal that can be tracked by searchers.

The idea is that the buoys drift in a manner similar to any debris, giving searchers clues as to where debris might move over time. The system isn't perfect - the wind can move the buoys at a different rate than larger objects - but is designed to factor in some of those variables.

Is this it? ... The satellite images of objects in the Indian Ocean which may be from missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. Picture: Australian Government's Department of Defence / Australian Maritime Safety Authority Source: AFP

WHAT THE IMAGES SHOW

The satellite data imagery showed two objects possibly related to the missing Malaysia Airlines flight which disappeared on March 8 with 239 people on board.

The images were captured on March 16 but due to the volume of imagery being searched, and the detailed process of analysis that followed, the information was brought to the attention of the Australian Maritime Safety Authority on Thursday morning.

One of the objects was 24 metres in length and the other was five metres.

The images have been assessed as being credible but it is possible they do not relate to the search.

Mr Young said "it's probably the best lead we have right now.''

"The search will continue (Friday),'' he said, after it had to be called off due to low visibility caused by clouds and rain.

New impetus in search effort ... an AP-3C Orion aircraft at RAAF Base Pearce in Bullsbrook, northeast of Perth. Picture: Leading Seaman Justin Brown / Department of Defence Source: AFP

DIFFICULTIES IN SEARCH

Ocean expert Dr Robin Beaman from James Cook University said debris could have been carried hundreds of kilometres since the satellite images were captured on March 16.

"The currents are drifting at one or two nautical miles per hour so it certainly makes sense that it could have drifted several hundred miles by now," he said.

"There'd be parts of the plane that could float for some time but certainly not indefinitely. "Eventually parts like that will become waterlogged and sink to the sea floor so it's time critical," he said.

Aviation expert Neil Hansford says he is convinced that crew on board MH370 are responsible for its disappearance. Courtesy Wake Up/Network Ten

DID PILOTS FLY TO REMOTE SPOT ON PURPOSE?

Aviation industry expert Neil Hansford has proposed the controversial theory that either one or both of the pilots of MH370 flew the plane to an area where it would not be found.

Speaking on Channel Ten's Wake Up program this morning, Mr Hansford said he believed the flight had not been subject to a mechanical problem but a "crew-related incident".

"It wasn't a catastrophic explosion, it wasn't hit by military ordinance, this aircraft has been positioned to where it is ... it could just as easily, or more frighteningly, have been positioned at the centre of Australia," he said.

Asked to clarify his remarks, Mr Hansford said: "If I was trying to lose an aircraft and make sure there was no evidence and the black boxes and everything were hard to find, you'd certainly be looking to put the aircraft into very, very deep water a long way from land."

Search areas ... A map of the areas searched between March 18-20 for Flight MH370. Picture: AMSA/Getty Images Source: Getty Images

COULD OBJECT BE A SHIPPING CONTAINER?

Dr John Blaxland from the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at ANU told Melbourne's 3AW this morning that he was "not optimistic" that the items in the water were plane debris.

"It may well be an ISO (shipping) container," he said. "ISO containers come in roughly that length ... and unfortunately the image is not very clear.

"The imagery specialists have gone and zoomed in on this photo ... you see something that's just below the surface, and the waves are just detracting from the clarity of the picture. It is not really clear exactly what it is. Now, some people have said it might be part of a wing, it could be part of the fuselage, probably not. On the balance of probabilities it may well be a submerged, semi-submerged ISO container. So I think we need to be very circumspect about how we view this and how optimistic we are about what we might find if and or when we find it."

Speaking today in Papua New Guinea, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said since receiving the satellite images "we've been throwing everything we've got at that area to try to learn more about what this debris might be".

"Now it could just be a container that's fallen off a ship. We just don't know but we owe it to the families, friends, the loved ones of the almost 240 people on flight MH 370 to do everything we can to try to resolve what is as yet an extraordinary riddle," he said.

Liberal MP Malcolm Turnbull speaks on the TODAY Show, saying the possible discovery of debris from MH370 off the West Coast of Australia is a 'positive lead' but still no sure thing. Courtesy Channel Nine.

OPINION: Did Tony Abbott speak too soon?

'WE'RE PUTTING IN MAXIMUM EFFORT': TRUSS

Acting Prime Minister Warren Truss has described the search as "very difficult and challenging", given the objects would have moved because of the tides and wind.

"Clearly they will have moved since the 16th of March when those images were originally captured," Mr Truss told ABC Radio.

"The search area is quite broad."

"There have been some marker buoys dropped in the location to help get a better understanding of what drift if likely to have occurred in the area and that can also help to pinpoint the search area."

He said the search can only be conducted in daylight hours and "it is a very long journey to the site".

"Unfortunately aircraft can only have one or two hours over the search area before they need to return to the mainland for fuel," Mr Truss added.

The Acting PM said there is a risk the weather conditions may deteriorate but the "maximum effort is being put in".

He said Australia has discussed with other countries getting more resources, but it will take "a very long time" for those to be deployed.

"We need to use the resources we have in that intervening period," he argued.

Roller-coaster ride ... A relative of a passenger aboard Flight MH370 is assisted by volunteers as she leaves a room where families were briefed on rescue and searching efforts in Beijing. Picture: AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan Source: AFP

FAMILIES: Clinging to hope

EMOTIONAL MOMENT FOR FAMILIES

The sighting of the possible debris was another emotional moment for the families of those missing.

In Beijing, relatives met today with Malaysian officials at the Lido Hotel, where most have been staying awaiting the latest news. Those who spoke said they had a two-hour briefing about the search but that nothing new was said.

Wang Zhen, son of artist Wang Linshi, said the meeting went smoothly but that there were questions on why Malaysian authorities had provided so much seemingly contradictory information.

Mr Wang said he has hopes his father can be found alive and was praying that the Australian reports turn out to be false. He said he and other relatives are suspicious about what they were being told by the Malaysian side, but are at a loss as to what to do next.

"We feel they're hiding something from us,'' said Mr Wang, who was filling his days attending briefings and watching the news for updates.

Another relative, Nan Jinyan, sister-in-law of passenger Yan Ling, said hope was slipping away.

"I'm psychologically prepared for the worst and I know the chances of them coming back alive are extremely small,'' she said.

Selamat Bin Omar, the father of a Malaysian passenger on the flight, said: "If it turns out that it is truly MH370 then we will accept that fate.''

But he cautioned that relatives still "do not yet know for sure whether this is indeed MH370 or something else. Therefore we are still waiting for further notice from the Australian government.''

Malaysian officials met with the relatives on Thursday night in a hotel near Kuala Lumpur, but journalists were kept away. After the meeting, groups of people left looking distraught.

Hamid Amran, who had a child on Flight 370, said questions asked at the meeting made it "apparent that Malaysia's military is incapable of protecting its own airspace.''

He said he "believes that my child and all the other passengers are still alive. I will not give up hope.''

A man who would only give his surname, Lau, said he was there to support a Chinese couple who had lost their only son.

"It appears some families are slowly accepting the worst outcome,'' he said.

Helping out ... Hoegh St. Petersburg is the first ship to reach an area south west of Australia where possible debris of missing airliner MH370 has been spotted. Picture: AP Photo/hoegh.com/ NTB scanpix Source: AP

SEARCH: Hoegh St Petersburg arrives at debris spot

CAR CARRIER ON SCENE

Hoegh Autolines spokesman Ben Stack said the car carrier Hoegh St. Petersburg arrived at the search area at 8pm Thursday AEST.

The Norwegian cargo vessel used searchlights after dark to look for debris. It continued the search on Friday.

Mr Stack said he could not confirm whether those on board the ship had sighted the objects depicted in the satellite imagery.

"They want to help in any way they can and they're going to do as the Australian authorities ask them to," he said.

Höegh St Petersburg was on its way from South Africa to Australia and was the ship closest to the search area.

Maintenance personnel conduct post-flight checks on one of the AP-3C Orions involved in the search at the Royal Australian Air Force Base Pearce in Bullsbrook, Western Australia. Picture: Leading Seaman Justin Brown / Department of Defence Source: AFP

BACKGROUND: Inside the search for MH370

'NEEDLE IN A HAYSTACK'

RAAF Hercules pilot Flight Lieutenant Conan Brett conceded the area aircraft had covered so far was vast and finding a missing plane in a huge section of Indian Ocean was like looking for a "needle in a haystack''.

The pilot, who has served in Iraq and Afghanistan, said his crew were doing everything possible to assist AMSA and find either survivors or wreckage.

"This is a big deal. We are out there looking. If we can help, even in a small way, to find answers, that would be exceptional,'' Flight Lieutenant Brett said.

The captain of the first Orion plane to return from the search area yesterday cautioned that the weather conditions were "extremely bad" with rough seas and high winds.

Not great weather for flying ... a large thunderstorm moves through the north of Perth in the early hours of Friday, March 21. Picture: Mark Finley / Perth Weather Live Source: Supplied

SEARCH CONDITIONS IMPROVING TODAY

Conditions may have looked bad Friday morning for the pilots, with a thunderstorm over Air Force Base Pearce in Bullsbrook, north east of Perth, but conditions are improving, Australia's Bureau of Meteorology told AFP.

"Showers associated with the passage of a cold front on Thursday, which saw low cloud and drizzle affect visibility, are easing,'' the bureau said.

"Winds are currently 15-20 knots, with swell 2 to 2.5 metres, and also easing. Overall conditions are expected to slowly improve today for the search operations in the area.''

The first planes took off from Bullsbrook at 6.15am Friday morning (9.15am AEDT).

The flying time to the designated search area is expected to take about four hours.

With the journey there and back, it only leaves one or two hours flying time for the planes to sweep the area for additional signs of wreckage.

On the search ... Royal Australian Air Force pilot Flight Lieutenant Russell Adams from 10 Squadron, flying his AP-3C Orion over the southern Indian Ocean during the search for flight MH370. Picture: Sgt Hamish Paterson / Department of Defence Source: AFP

LIMITS OF SATELLITE IMAGES

Experts have warned of the limitations of the satellite images.

"You know how they say a picture is worth 1000 words? Well, in satellite imagery, the picture's only worth 500. The rest has to come from analysis,'' said Sean O'Connor, an imagery analyst.

"It would be very nice if you could see a whole wing floating there, then you could say, 'OK that's an aeroplane,''' O'Connor said. "When you're looking at something like this, you can't tell what it is.''

Search expert David Gallo discusses the difficulty of finding wreckages at the bottom of the ocean. Courtesy Fox News

The images came from a DigitalGlobe commercial satellite that scans the Earth from the north to south, said Tim Brown, a satellite imagery expert at GlobalSecurity.org.

These kinds of satellites can look left to right, but the further they look to the side, the lower quality the images will be. There are other limitations. Because of their orbits, they can only scan a specific section of the Earth at certain times each day, much like the sun is only overhead part of the day.

Awaiting news ... Malaysia's Minister of Defence and Acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein. Source: AFP

MYSTERY: Who did MH370 pilot call before flight?

TOURISM: Asian travel boom set to continue

Second piece of wreckage ... the second satellite image, showing an item possibly 5 metres in length. Picture: Department of Defence Source: AFP

MALAYSIAN RESPONSE TO FAMILIES

Asked what he would tell the families, Mr Hussein said: "I will tell them, whatever we find, my sympathies, my heart is with them all the time … I do feel for them and I say that on record and I say that to the world. We do care for them and we can understand, we can try to understand what they are going through."

Mr Hussein admitted regret at an incident at the media centre on Wednesday when an anguished Chinese mother was dragged away screaming from the media.

'The best lead we have' ... Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) General Manager John Young updates the media with new information about Flight MH370. Source: News Corp Australia


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Stones drummer in surprise club gig

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 20 Maret 2014 | 22.16

Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts at the Ellington Jazz Club in Perth.

ROLLING Stones drummer Charlie Watts gave a surprise performance at the Ellington Jazz Club in Perth last night.

Music lovers were taken aback when the famous rock'n'roller got on stage at the Beaufort Street haunt on the same night as their cancelled Perth Arena concert.

Watts, lead singer Mick Jagger and the rest of the Rolling Stones have been holed up in Perth's Hyatt Regency hotel after the shock death of Jagger's girlfriend L'Wren Scott in New York on Monday night (Perth time).

But Watts was seen leaving the Hyatt Hotel, where the band have been staying since they arrived Sunday night, last night and heading out for dinner.

Kaitlyn Elsegood, who took photographs of the Stones' veteran on stage, told PerthNow she was at the venue to watch a friend's band when word started to spread that one of the world's best drummers was in the audience.

Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts performs at the Ellington Jazz club in Perth on the night of the Stones' cancelled Perth concert. Picture: Kaitlyn Elsegood

Watts was invited on stage about midnight by Rolling Stones saxophonist Tim Ries, who was at The Ellington performing music by the Stones.

Watts, who was joined at the jazz club by his granddaughter, treated the crowd to two songs including an instrumental version of Stone's hit Honky Tonk Woman.

Ellington co-owner Graham Wood said the famous drummer slipped in through the kitchen/stage door.

"His security guys kind of did a sweep through and made sure everything was ok," Mr Wood said.

Charlie Watts the Ellington Jazz Club in Perth with Stones saxophist Tim Ries, left, and Karl Florrison. Picture: Jess Herbert - Instagram

"He didn't make a grand entrance or anything, it was all low key.

"He was there really just to enjoy the music.

"Then he got up and played a couple of numbers."

Wood said saxophonist Tim Ries sent him a text message at about 9pm last night, asking him to put aside a table for Watts and his entourage.

Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts performs at the Ellington Jazz club in Perth on the night of the Stones' cancelled Perth concert. Picture: Kaitlyn Elsegood

Ries and The Rolling Stones backing singer Bernard Fowler also performed.

Ms Elsegood added: "He didn't really say much, just got up and played the drums."

"He played for 45 minutes.

"It was very, very relaxed and very, very composed, and then he got off and listened to the rest of the bands." Watts stayed till 1am closing.

Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts looks leaves a restaurant last night. Picture: SPLASH

Ms Elsegood said it was "a genuine thrill" to watch the legendary Stones drummer play.

"I think it was pretty humble that he just came along to The Ellington Jazz Club.

"The other musicians were also amazing and he was applauding them."

Earlier the drumer told Mail Online that Stones frontman Mick Jagger was still in a state of shock over the death of his fashion designer partner.

Mick Jagger and L'Wren Scott at a function in New York. Picture: Getty Images

"He's not really well. He's not really here. It was such a shock," he said.

Watts said the 70-year-old rocker has reportedly not slept since the news broke and is so upset he can barely speak.

He reiterated that Scott's death had shocked the entire Stones family.

"Needless to say we are all completely shocked but our first thought is to support Mick at this awful time," he said.

Did you see Watts at the Ellington? Send us your photos to staff@perthnow.com.au

Twitter: @KaitlynPST


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‘TJD’ outrage prompts law review

A serial sex offender released last week has already allegedly breached a reporting condition. Source: News Limited

ATTORNEY-General Michael Mischin has announced there will be a complete review of the Dangerous Sexual Offenders Act following public backlash over the release of a violent predator last week.

"TJD", who was fitted with a GPS tracking device and placed under a strict 10-year supervision order, was arrested eight days after he was freed from prison.

WA Supreme Court Commissioner Kevin Sleight released the serial offender, whose was described in psychological assessments as a sexual sadist with psychopathic tendencies, saying the conditions on the order were sufficient to protect the community despite having a "high risk of reoffending".

Police arrested him this week after he breached his order. He was bailed and is expected to appear in court next week.

The 38-year-old was convicted of attacks against 13 women, including six violent sexual attacks which took place when he was 15-years-old.

In one offence he forced a 17-year-old girl into a toilet block by threatening her with a replica handgun. He then raped her and then stood guard outside while his friend raped her as well.

Mr Mischin said he was concerned by the recent WA Supreme Court decision and had ordered a review into all aspects of the Act to "ensure it meets the community's expectations of the handling of dangerous sex offenders".

"The Government's principal concern is to ensure the community is protected," he said.

"I have asked my department to conduct the review in close consultation with the Director of Public Prosecutions, WA Police, the Department of Corrective Services and the Commissioner for Victims of Crime and to report back to me within three months.

"If any reforms are required, I will introduce legislation for those reforms in the spring session of Parliament and I would expect the full support of the Opposition in passing this legislation."

Mr Mischin said matters to be covered by the review will include:

Attorney General Michael Mischin shares community concerns about the man's release.

• the process of application for declaration as a DSO to the Supreme Court

• the length of periodic reviews of offenders subject to DSO orders

• the consequences for breaching release conditions, including the granting of bail

• the process and penalties for dealing with breach matters.

The Supreme Court found that the conditions on the order were sufficient to protect the community, despite him having "a high risk of reoffending

Besides having to wear a GPS tracking device, TJD's conditions also include abiding by a night-time curfew and a ban on unsupervised access to children.

Meanwhile, high-profile lawyer Tom Percy has backed the decision to release TJD from indefinite detention saying the public reaction has been hysterical.

Reflecting on media coverage of the matter, Mr Percy called for calm, saying the decision to release TJD was taken after the most serious consideration.

He said the media and public had only heard a very small portion of the facts of the case, unlike the judiciary.

``The person who had it all in front of them was the judge and the other party with all the facts was the DPP,'' Mr Percy said.

``The DPP, after consideration of all the reports - all of the extensive material in relation to this matter, which has been prepared over a number of years - came to the view that he should be released.

``I can only assume that the DPP made that after some agonising, and some very serious and mature consideration.''

Mr Percy said the judge was no way bound by the DPP position, but made his decision after careful consideration, and in the interest of justice and his sworn duty to protect the public.

``There has been a lot of hysteria about this.

``It's time for people to just settle down a bit.''

Criminal Lawyers Association of WA president Linda Black said TJD's alleged breach was as minor as could be imagined and would be determined by a court, not police.

``It seems to me, it's an example of the system working at its finest,'' Ms Black told ABC radio.

``He clearly was released under incredibly strict conditions and the moment he so much as breathed the wrong way ... action is taken.

``If it were anyone other than him, it would not be talked about.''

She too defended Commissioner Sleight.

``The particular judge who released him is not some bleeding heart, incompetent, inexperienced judge,'' she said.

``This is a man who's been in the system for a long time - he's not known for being excessively soft.

``He's very, very sensible, intelligent and he has a long history of making good decisions.''

In his judgment, Commissioner Kevin Sleight, who imposed the first indefinite detention order on TJD in 2011, said that he was obliged to adopt "the least restrictive alternative which is compatible with the protection of the public."

"Of course, it is relevant that Mr TJD had been previously released on a supervision order but almost immediately significantly breached the terms of the order leading to the cancellation,'' he said.

Commissioner Sleight said he understood TJD was "shattered" by having his first supervised release order revoked and had learned a "salutary lesson" from the breach.

The Director of Public Prosecutions has to apply to the court to cancel a supervision order.

WA opposition leader Mark McGowan said that if he was the attorney-general and knew the offender's indefinite detention order was coming up for review, he ``would have had words with the DPP about the approach''.

"`I don't think that is inappropriate and I think it's a gross failure and a gross negligence on the part of the attorney-general not to have done so,'' Mr McGowan said.

TJD breached a previous supervision order in 2012, winding up back in jail after he failed to take anti-libidinal medication and complete his psychological counselling, and also used cannabis.

The 38-year-old has been convicted of attacks against 13 women, including six violent sexual attacks which took place when he was 15-years-old.

In one offence he forced a 17-year-old girl into a toilet block by threatening her with a replica handgun. He then raped her and then stood guard outside while his friend raped her as well.

He was released on the condition that he continue psychotherapy, continue to take anti-libidinal medication, undergo random urinalysis and breath analysis, obey a night-time curfew, have no unsupervised access to children and wear a GPS tracker.


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Jamie Oliver set for quick Perth stop

Chef superstar Jamie Oliver is making his first visit to his Perth restaurant Jamie's Italian since it opened a year ago. He will touch down tonight. Source: Supplied

Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver will touch down in Perth tonight. Source: Supplied

FOOD superstar Jamie Oliver is due to touch down in Perth tonight for a whirlwind visit.

Oliver, the world's richest chef, is making his first visit to his Perth restaurant Jamie's Italian since it opened a year ago.

The Perth eatery is the most successful in Oliver's international string of Italian restaurants, even ahead of London's Covent Garden.

Such is demand that a year after its opening there is still a two-and-a-half hour wait for tables.

The British celebrity chef is understood to be flying into Perth tonight from Singapore.

Tomorrow morning he is due to meet staff at the restaurant at about 9.30am for a couple of hours before flying out tomorrow afternoon to Sydney.

In Sydney, Oliver will appear on stage at Carriageworks on Sunday to announce the winner of a national search to find a location for a new Jamie's Ministry of Food pop-up kitchen.

The kitchens teach aspiring cooks over the age of 12 how to make Oliver's food.

WA cook Anna Gare, a Ministry of Food ambassador, will be among those on stage with Oliver, who is famous for his TV shows, cookbooks and campaigns against processed foods in schools.

Bunbury is in the running as a site for the pop-up kitchen after its South West Institute of Technology was announced as the WA finalist last week.

In its submission the institute said the South-West community had seen a 30 per cent increase in people being medically diagnosed as obese in the past decade and the Bunbury area had one of Australia's highest concentrations of fast food outlets per capita.

"Being selected as the WA finalist for Jamie Oliver's Ministry of Food's Australian pop-up kitchen is beyond exciting," the institute's Duncan Anderson said.

"We hope we can bring the pop up to Bunbury, it would make a real difference to the people in our community."


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Rolling Stones farewell Perth

The Rolling Stones jet takes off from Perth Airport. Source: News Corp Australia

THE Rolling Stones' tragic and tumultuous stay in Australia is at an end after the band departed Perth in their private jet this afternoon.

Early this afternoon, the band left the Hyatt Perth under a police escort for Perth Airport, where their jet took off slightly ahead of schedule at 2.55pm.

A motorcade of four cars left the hotel just after 2pm, escorted by one police car, as a crowd of about 30 people got a glimpse as the band members sped away.

Ronnie Wood and an unknown woman leave the Hyatt Hotel in Perth. Picture: Stewart Allen Source: News Corp Australia

Charlie Watts and his granddaughter Charlotte leave the Hyatt as Rolling Stones fans look on. Picture: Stewart Allen Source: News Corp Australia

Streets outside the Perth were temporarily blocked off as the band jumped into cars via the loading bay at the hotel.

The car arrived at Perth Airport and drove straight on to the tarmac before the band and their crew were quickly ushered into the Boeing 767.

■ WATCH: STONES DRUMMER HIT THE STAGE AT PERTH JAZZ CLUB

The police escort prepares to clear the way for the Rolling Stones. Picture: Stewart Allen Source: News Corp Australia

Baggage is loaded onto the Rolling Stones jet as it's prepared for takeoff at Perth Airport. Source: Getty Images

As the band prepared to depart Perth this morning, after the sudden death earlier this week of Mick Jagger's girlfriend, L'Wren Scott, there was some brighter news for fans.

Late this morning, Frontier Touring updated Facebook to confirm they were aiming to set new dates for the Australia and New Zealand legs of the postponed tour.

Frontier Touring said: "At this very sad time we would like to reassure Rolling Stones fans and ticket holders that every effort is currently being made to reschedule the postponed Australia and New Zealand dates for October/November 2014.

A man, possibly Mick Jagger, walks from his car to the Rolling Stones jet at Perth Airport. Picture: Bohdan Warchomij Source: Supplied

The Rolling Stones luggage being loaded into the back of a truck at the Hyatt Hotel in Perth. Source: News Corp Australia

■ IS THIS THE END OF THE ROLLING STONES?

"Rescheduled dates are being presently worked on for The Rolling Stones '14 On Fire' Tour of Australia & New Zealand and will be announced as soon as possible. If the new dates are not suitable, rest assured you will be able to secure a refund.

"While we encourage fans to hold on to their tickets the option to secure a refund is now available to you via the official ticketing agency you purchased from. Patrons will be able to secure a refund for the value of their tickets and fees and charges incurred in purchasing the ticket."

MICK JAGGER 'NOT WELL, NOT REALLY HERE' SAYS BANDMATE

The Rolling Stones private jet on the airfield of Perth International Airport. Picture: Bohdan Warchomij Source: Supplied


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Anxious wait for painful truth on MH370

The AMSA says RAAF aircraft are investigating objects 'as large as 24 metres' in the search for MH370.

PM Tony Abbott announces two possible objects relating to the search of the missing Malaysian Airlines plane have been identified, and a RAAF Orion is on its way to locate them.

THE anxious families of the Australians on board missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 are on tenterhooks waiting for confirmation radar images showing large debris floating 2300km off the coast of Western Australia are actually the lost plane.

Six Australians were on board the ill-fated flight, as well as New Zealand-born Paul Weeks, who was living in Perth.

Mary and Rodney Burrows and Catherine and Robert Lawton, all from Brisbane, were travelling together from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing when the plane disappeared on March 8.

Li Yuan and Gu Naijun, from Sydney, were also on board.

VESSELS THAT WILL SEARCH THE INDIAN OCEAN

TOP 10 THEORIES ON FLIGHT MH370

On Thursday night a member of the Lawton family said they were aware of the latest developments but were waiting for a more conclusive discovery.

Meanwhile, experts have warned that if the plane is lying at the bottom of the southern Indian Ocean 2300km southwest of Perth the recovery operation could take months or even years.

The water depth in the area where flotsam was detected by satellite is about 3600m.

Catherine and Robert Lawton. Source: Supplied

Mary and Rodney Burrows. Source: Supplied

Wreckage of Air France Flight 447 that crashed in 2009 was recovered two years later from the floor of the Atlantic Ocean at a depth of 4000m.

The Titanic was found in 3800m of water and the HMAS Sydney was located and photographed in great detail in 2468m in the Indian Ocean off the coast of WA.

Neither of those wrecks were recovered.

Almost two weeks after the crash there would be less debris on the surface and it would be more dispersed from any wreckage that has sunk to the bottom.

Satellite imagery provided to AMSA of objects that may be possible debris of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 in a revised area 185km to the south east of the original search area. Source: Supplied

A second object spotted via satellite, which is 5m long. Source: Supplied

Once the search area was identified the massive task of locating the bulk of the wreck would begin taking account of currents and winds. It could be hundreds of kilometres from the crash site.

An RAAF Hercules aircraft yesterday dropped marker buoys in the area highlighted by the satellite imagery to track currents and wind drift.

Four search aircraft were on the scene using scanners to detect minute temperature differences between the water and debris, as well as radar.

A merchant ship that responded to a shipping broadcast issued by Rescue Co-ordination Australia on Monday was due in the area about 6pm on Thursday.

Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) spokesman John Young said the marker buoys would provide an ongoing reference point if the task of relocating the objects becomes protracted.

Chinese relatives of missing passengers console each other and wait for news. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

In AMSA's experience there was usually debris floating in that area, but on this occasion the size, and the fact there were a number, made it worth looking at, he said.

He also cautioned against any hasty expectations of an outcome because of unfavourable weather conditions.

"We may get a sighting, we may not. We may get it tomorrow, we may not," he said.

"But we will continue to do this until we locate those objects or we are convinced that we cannot find them."

Navy ships and salvage firms around the world would be capable of locating the wreckage using powerful sonars that detect anomalies on the ocean floor.

US or Chinese nuclear submarines could also isolate the "pings" from the black boxes if they arrive before the 30-day battery limit expires.

Once pinpointed, a remotely operated vehicle known as a Remora would be sent down to capture imagery of the wreckage and to recover items such as the aircraft's "black boxes" that contain crucial voice and data recorders.

Depending on how the aircraft hit the water there could be bodies still strapped into seats such as those from the Air France jet that smashed into the sea largely intact.

A Royal Australian Air Force pilot flies over the Indian Ocean in search for missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370. Source: Supplied

Searchers found debris after just five days and it was estimated that the impact site was about 25km away. It turned out to be 50km away.

If flight MH370 slammed into the ocean at high speed then the likelihood of finding wreckage on the bottom of the ocean is very remote.

AMSA yesterday revealed that satellite images showed two large objects, including one that is 24m long, and several smaller pieces that could be related to the missing ­Malaysia Airlines plane.

Some parts of aircraft, such as seat back cushions, are designed to float.

Planes like the Boeing 777 use composite materials in the form of a honeycomb using light materials with air trapped inside.

Journalists at the Everly Hotel near the city watch a news announcement of the debris discovery. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

Those parts will float, as the tail of Air France Flight 447 did, and the tail of the American Airlines A300 jet that crashed shortly after take-off from Kennedy International Airport in November 2001.

The reported objects are close to an area of remote ocean, about 2300km southwest of Perth, where a joint Australian, New Zealand and US team has been searching since Monday for the wide-bodied airliner, which has been missing for the past fortnight with 239 people on board.

Mr Young described it as "the best lead we have at the moment".

Central Queensland University aviation expert Ron Bishop said discovering what happened to the Boeing 777 would resemble putting together a "jigsaw puzzle".

Once any aircraft wreckage was recovered, it would be taken to an investigation site where it would be painstakingly assembled in a hangar, Mr Bishop said.

ian.mcphedran@news.com.au


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