Tourist who found debris was searching for MH370
By Juliet Perry, CNN
Updated 1704 GMT (0104 HKT) March 3, 2016
American tourist finds plane debris off Mozambique 01:22
Story highlights
·
Blaine Gibson chartered a boat and organized weekend trip on the coast
of Mozambique
·
Gibson is self-funding a search for the plane that mysteriously
disappeared two years ago
(CNN)The man who found a piece of plane wreckage off the Mozambique coast has been traveling around the Indian Ocean for
a year in a quest to solve the mystery of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.
Blaine Gibson, a U.S. lawyer from
Seattle, is spearheading a self-funded hunt for the missing plane in an
exhaustive search that has taken him from the Maldives to Mauritius and
Myanmar.
"I've been very involved in the
search for Malaysia 370, just out of personal interest and in a private group
-- not in a for-profit way or journalistic way," Gibson told CNN this
week.
MH370's disappearance is one of the
world's biggest aviation mysteries. The plane vanished from radar while en
route from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing, with 239 people on board, on
March 8, 2014.
"I went for the one-year
commemoration in Kuala Lumpur and met some of the family members and families,
and it inspired me to keep on looking."
He has trawled beaches, spoken to
witnesses and interviewed people who have reported debris -- all in an effort
to discover the truth of what happened to the ill-fated flight.
"Most experts and the official
search authorities believe the plane flew south rather than north,"Gibson writes in a blog on his search. "However one year of searching the Southern Indian ocean has
failed to discover any debris."
A happy accident?
However, this potential discovery --
he professes -- came on a holiday.
"Mozambique is really separate
from this -- even though it's on the Indian Ocean. I didn't come here to look
for the plane," he said.
"It was my 177th country to
visit. I'm here as a tourist, but since I'm passionately interested in MH370,
and I am on the Indian Ocean I thought, 'Why not take a boat out and ask some
of the local people where stuff washed ashore from the open ocean?' "
Gibson and the owner of the boat he
chartered for the weekend found the plane part washed ashore on a sandbar.
According to a U.S. official, the
debris is apparently from a Boeing 777, like the missing
MH370 airliner.
Others are more skeptical. Cmdr.
Joao Abreu of the Mozambique Civil Aviation Authority told CNN's David McKenzie
that the piece of debris might belong to a "medium-sized plane" and
not a 777.
"What went through my mind when
I found it is that this is something that could be part of an airplane and
could be part of that airplane," Gibson told McKenzie in Mozambique.
The story of such a discovery might
seem even too perfect.
"It seems so unlikely, too, but
the thing is nature works in mysterious ways," Gibson said. "Why does
the ocean do what it does? I don't know. Maybe this is part of that plane,
maybe this is part of another. It's small and it's very light so maybe it's
just from some light aircraft. It would just be so unbelievable if it actually
is from 370. That's exactly what went through my mind."
The discovery was reported to
officials Monday, and Gibson handed over his find to Mozambique authorities,
Abreu said. The debris will be sent to Australia for examination.
Gibson said he's keen to exercise
caution around the significance of his find, sharply aware of the impact it
could have on victims' families.
"Anything that can help lead to
the truth of what happened and get the families the answers that they long for
and deserve no matter what they are, whatever the truth is, anything that leads
to that, is very good and needs to be done," he said.
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