A SLIPPER found on a beach in Madagascar could have belonged to a passenger aboard doomed Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, a woman working with an amateur investigator has said.
Sheryl Keen, of Australia, has about 20 items she believes came from the flight.
Sheryl, 52 told Daily Mail Australia she had been working with amateur investigator Blaine Gibson to examine clues in a bid to discover the fate of the plane.
She said the most promising clue is a single slipper similar to one worn by a woman seen on CCTV boarding the flight in March 2014.
She said: “What else could it be from?
“We’re looking at a substantial amount of personal effects which all alike, are all in similar condition, similar deterioration and all found along the same stretch of Riake beach in Madagascar.
“And it’s in an area that an oceanographer said people should go look for things.”
The items were found on a stretch of Riake beach in Madagascar.
The group contacted the Madagascan authorities and items were handed over in the belief investigators would pick them up, but Sheryl said they did not.
Sheryl understands the devastation of plane crashes.
She formed a support group for the families of air tragedy victims after her husband was killed in a plane crash in 2009.
Doomed Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 became one of the world’s greatest aviation mysteries when it disappeared without a trace.
Investigators remain puzzled over the whereabouts of the missing aircraft, which was carrying 239 passengers and crew when it vanished in March 2014.
The MH370 Boeing was seen for the last time on military radar at 2.14am, close to the south of Phuket island in the Strait of Malacca.
Before that, Malaysian authorities believe the last words heard from the plane, from either the pilot or co-pilot, was “Good night Malaysian three seven zero”.
Half an hour later, the airline lost contact with the plane. It had been due to land at around 6.30am.