Malaysian PM won't say plane is lost
Facing anger from families of Flight 370 
passengers, Malaysia's Prime Minister said Thursday his government will 
release its preliminary report on the plane's disappearance.
In a TV exclusive, Najib Razak told CNN the report will be available to the public next week.
"I have directed an 
internal investigation team of experts to look at the report, and there 
is a likelihood that next week we could release the report," Najib said.
 Later in the interview with CNN aviation correspondent Richard Quest, 
he gave a more definitive statement, saying the report will be released 
next week.
He also asked an internal
 investigation team to look into what other information may be released 
publicly next week, his office said.
In the CNN interview, Najib discussed why he is not yet officially declaring the flight -- and the 239 people on board -- lost.
The report has already 
been sent to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the 
U.N. body for global aviation, but not made available to the public.
Malaysian PM: Familes need hard evidence
Malaysian PM: MH370 not deemed hostile
We'd like the chance to sit down and talk' 
Bajc: There's no evidence MH370 crashed
'What's so confidential about the data?' 
The ICAO told CNN about a
 safety recommendation in the report: Malaysia said the aviation world 
needs to look at real-time tracking of commercial aircraft. It's the 
same recommendation that was made after the Air France Flight 447 
disaster in 2009.
The Prime Minister's 
comments didn't convince Sarah Bajc, whose partner, Philip Wood, was a 
passenger on the plane. She accused Najib of "political maneuvering," 
shirking responsibility and deflecting blame in his interview with CNN.
"I spent most of the 
morning with my jaw basically scraping the floor," Bajc told CNN's 
"AC360." "I'm just so astounded by this new shift that the Prime 
Minister is taking. ... He's reading from a script sheet that some 
qualified, professional PR person has put together for him."
Malaysian authorities 
need to do a better job of communicating with the families and answering
 their questions during briefings, she said, rather than treating 
passengers' loved ones "as if we are the enemy, as opposed to an 
interested party in helping to solve this mystery."
"Actions speak louder 
than words," she said. "The briefings are a joke. ... The patience level
 of the families group is just gone."
Malaysia has insisted it has nothing to hide and is working to find answers.
A committee representing some of the Chinese families have posted 26 questions on the Chinese social media site Weibo.
Families plan to demand answers from Boeing
The missing flight is a Boeing 777.
While pushing Malaysian 
authorities for answers, "we're also extending our reach now," Bajc 
said. Some of the questions the families have, including technical 
questions, "we will be bringing directly to Boeing. Boeing has a 
shareholders meeting next week. And if we're not getting information 
directly from Malaysia Airlines and from the Malaysian government, we 
might as well try to go directly to the source.
"Boeing is a publicly 
traded company in the United States, and that puts them in a position of
 a little bit more fiduciary responsibility," she said.
Asked for a response, 
Boeing sent CNN a written statement: "Our thoughts and deepest 
sympathies continue to be with the families and loved ones of those 
aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. Boeing continues to serve as a 
technical adviser to the U.S. National Transportation (Safety) Board, 
and in that role we have been an active and engaged party to the 
investigation."
Ongoing search
MH370: Every piece of debris counts
Object in MH370 search not likely of use
'Object of interest' found in Australia
Inside one of the few black box labs
As an underwater drone keeps going up and back down, so do hopes that evidence of the plane may be found.
A metal object that washed ashore in Western Australia and sparked the curiosity of investigators Wednesday turned out to be unrelated.
And while the Bluefin-21
 plunged into the Indian Ocean for its 13th mission Friday, no one was 
certain the drone would find anything new.
The underwater probe has already scanned 95% of the designated search area, with no significant results.
Friday marks day 49 of 
the search for the plane, which disappeared on March 8 on a flight from 
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing.
What's next? 
Malaysian and Australian authorities are mapping out a long-term strategy for the search, which could go on for months or years.
An expanded search area 
might include the last 370 miles (595 kilometers) of the plane's flight 
path, ocean search specialist Rob McCallum said.
"If the idea is to go 
more strategic and investigate the entire aircraft flight path, maybe 15
 miles or so either side, then you need a more strategic tool, and 
something like a deep-towed sonar that can provide a very large range 
indeed -- at the expense of resolution."
The use of a deep-towed 
submersible device called the Orion is overdue, said Geoffrey Thomas, 
managing director of AirlineRatings.com.
"That should be brought in as quickly as possible, again, from the United States."
He said it may be time 
to go back and revisit the calculations of where the plane may be, 
although officials have already been doing that.
"This is not an exact science," Thomas said. "We have to understand that."
(CNN) 








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