According to the latest news about MH370 published by Malaysia's The Star, aerospace expert Jean- Luc Marchand and pilot Patrick Blelly called for a new search based on existing data on the fate of the flight.
The two experts called on the Australian Transport Safety Committee, as well as the Malaysian government and exploration company Ocean Infinity to launch a new search for the missing plane.
The mystery of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 could be solved within days if a new search is conducted, the two experts confirmed.
In a speech to the Royal Air Force Association (RAS), the two experts said that the new search area for MH370 could be reviewed for 10 days.
"We have finished the work at home. We have a proposal for a small area and it will take 10 days to consider new possibilities. It could be a quick fix. Until the debris from MH370 was found, no one knew what had happened. However, this is a reasonable trajectory," the Australian news site news.com.au quoted Marchand as saying.
He noted that the search for MH370 could be conducted using new underwater unmanned search technology.
Mr Marchad described the disappearance of flight MH370 as a bad one-way journey likely carried out by an experienced pilot.
We think and the research we conducted shows that thethetheft could have been committed by an experienced pilot.
The cabin pressure has been reduced and that is a controlled soft landing technique to create the least pieces of debris. This technique is done to prevent the plane from getting stuck or found," the veteran aviation expert pointed out.
Jean- Luc Marchand and Patrick Blelly argue that the MH370 signal transformer was turned off and that the plane's departure from the original flight route could not be done in autonomous flight mode.
On the evening of March 8, 2014, Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 carrying 239 people left Kuala Lumpur International Airport, Malaysia to Beijing, China but disappeared from radar screens about 2 hours after takeoff.
The mysterious disappearance of MH370 has triggered a large-scale search involving many countries.
A search for Malaysia Airlines' plane was launched in the southern Indian Ocean, but neither the plane nor the debris were found.