UK forces in hunt for missing Malaysian airliner
The Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force are making a valuable contribution to the Australian-led search for missing Malaysian airliner MH370.
![HMS Echo at sea (library image) [Picture: Leading Airman (Photographer) Chris Wenham, Crown Copyright]](https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a61e2c0e5274a0a1b112a51/s300_echo01.jpg)
HMS Echo at sea (library image)
Following a request by the Malaysian authorities for support from the Royal Navy, the survey ship was diverted from her patrol in the Indian Ocean, and the nuclear submarine has also been retasked to help in the search.
And RAF personnel have been flying in Royal Australian Air Force and Royal New Zealand Air Force maritime patrol aircraft scouring the waters from above, looking for debris and dropping listening buoys.

RAF Sergeant Steve Barnes aboard a Royal Australian Air Force AP-3C Orion looking for flight MH370 [Picture: Sergeant Hamish Paterson, 漏 Commonwealth of Australia, Department of Defence]
HMS Echo has scoured an area 6 times the size of Greater London as everyone involved in the hunt faces a race against time before the flight recorder stops sending out a signal. Working alongside ships and aircraft from 7 other nations, the 2 Royal Navy vessels face the same race against time to find the black box flight recorder.
Echo鈥檚 hi-tech sonar has been specially adapted so it can pick up any transmissions on the black box鈥檚 frequency. This is the first time her sonar has been used this way and so far it has located several possible contacts, but sadly none of them proved to be from MH370鈥檚 black box.
The ship has lookouts posted around the clock scanning the ocean for possible debris. HMS Echo鈥檚 duty swimmer, Able Seaman Joshua Ruff, has been in the water several times to recover objects, none of which so far have come from the crashed jet.

Able Seaman Joshua Ruff, HMS Echo's swimmer of the watch, is recovered from the water [Picture: Crown copyright]
Given the scale and importance of the task, Echo鈥檚 commanding officer, Commander Phillip Newell, said his 60 men and women were giving the search their all:
My ship鈥檚 company are working 24/7 to find MH370. They are young, bright and enthusiastic and will step up to every challenge in the search for the missing aircraft. I am immensely proud of them.
The Royal Australian Navy鈥檚 vessel Ocean Shield is searching 300 miles to the north.
HMS Tireless is also working as part of the co-ordinated international search. Her sonar, like Echo鈥檚, is listening for the 鈥榩ing鈥� sent out every second by the black box transponder as long as its battery lasts.
The most promising leads have come from the ships now at the forefront of the search, but so far they have not found the black box flight recorder or any wreckage from the missing plane.