­­Plane debris that has washed up on the French island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean is offering the biggest breakthrough in the search for missing Flight MH370, according to Malaysian official and aviation experts yesterday.

Malaysian investigators were visiting the island of Reunion yesterday and a particular object, identified by aviation experts as part of a wing, would then be sent to a French military laboratory near Toulouse for checks, French police sources said.

National carrier Malaysia Airlines was operating a Boeing 777 when the ill-fated flight disappeared in March last year en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, creating one of the most baffling mysteries in aviation history. It was carrying 239 passengers and crew.

This wreckage might enable us to further refine the search area

The plane piece was found washed up on Reunion, a volcanic island of 850,000 people that is a full part of France, located in the Indian Ocean near Madagascar. Reunion is roughly 3,700km from the broad expanse of the southern Indian Ocean off Australia where search efforts have focused, but officials and experts said currents could have carried wreckage that way, thousands of kilometres from where the plane is thought to have crashed.

MH370 is believed to be the only 777 to have crashed south of the equator since the jet came into service 20 years ago. If the debris is confirmed to be from MH370, experts will try to retrace its drift back to where the bulk of the plane likely sank on impact. However, they cautioned that the discovery was unlikely to provide any more precise information about the aircraft’s final resting place.

Nevertheless, the search area for MH370 could be refined, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said.

“I don’t know how accurate that will be but I dare say it will give us some more evidence and it might enable us to further refine the search area, it might,” Abbott told Australian radio.

Aviation experts who have seen widely circulated pictures of the piece of debris, which is about 2-2.5 metres long, said it may be a moving wing surface known as a flaperon.

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