Chinese relatives of passengers from the missing Malaysia Airlines flight console each other before a meeting with airline officials in Beijing. (AFP/Mark RALSTON)
BEIJING: A Chinese aircrew has spotted "suspicious objects" in the southern Indian Ocean in the search for vanished Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, the official Xinhua news agency said Monday.
Searchers discovered "two relatively big floating objects with many white smaller ones scattered within a radius of several kilometres", Xinhua said, citing a reporter on board a Chinese Ilyushin-76 plane.
The larger objects were "white and square", it added.
"The crew has reported the coordinates -- 95.1113 degrees east and 42.5453 south -- to the Australian command centre as well as Chinese icebreaker Xuelong, which is en route to the sea area," Xinhua said.
The Xuelong has now changed course towards the latest sighting, the news agency said in a subsequent report.
Earlier Xinhua reports said a Chinese military plane set off Monday morning from the western Australian city of Perth to seek "suspicious debris" captured by satellite imagery in the remote waters.
Flight MH370 disappeared from civilian radar 16 days ago, nearly an hour after taking off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing.
Chinese passengers comprised two-thirds of the 239 people aboard the Boeing 777.
According to Xinhua, two Chinese planes that had been searching the area were returning to Perth, and the crew had asked Australia to send more aircraft to the area.
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