A mural in Kuala Lumpur.
Mohd Rasfan / AFP / Getty Images
A piece of debris that washed ashore in Mozambique over the weekend most likely belongs to the same model of aircraft as the Malaysian Airlines jet that disappeared almost two years ago.
Unnamed U.S. officials told a number of media outlets that what appears to be part of a Boeing 777 airliner was discovered in the east African nation over the weekend.
The debris, which is being taken to Malaysia for further analysis, is believed to be a section of the right-hand horizontal stabilizer, part of the small wing-like sections on a plane's tail, an official told the Associated Press.
Olivier Cleynen / Via en.wikipedia.org
MH370 disappeared on March 8, 2014, while traveling from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board.
Investigators believe the jet veered wildly off course before crashing into the southern Indian ocean off the western coast of Australia, killing all on board.
The only confirmed piece of the jet to have been discovered was found last year on the French island of Réunion.
Writing on Twitter on Wednesday, Malaysia's transportation minister, Liow Tiong Lai, said there is a "high possibility" the Mozambique debris belongs to a Boeing 777.
However, he said the piece has yet to be formally "confirmed and verified."
"I urged everyone to avoid undue speculation as we are not able to conclude that the debris belongs to #MH370 at this time," the minister wrote.
MH370 is the only known missing Boeing 777 in the world.
LINK: Plane Wreckage Found On Indian Ocean Island Is Part Of Missing MH370, Malaysia Prime Minister Says
SOURCE: BuzzFeed
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