Malaysia Officially Declares Vanished Flight MH370 an Accident

The declaration will allow efforts to proceed with compensation claims.

The declaration fulfills a legal obligation that will allow efforts to proceed with compensation claims -- but also marks a somber development for relatives of the plane’s passengers and crew, who’ve waited nearly 11 months for answers about the plane’s fate.

Azharuddin Abdul Rahman said the underwater search for the plane, which went missing 327 days ago, is continuing and has covered more than 7,000 square miles so far.

“It is nonetheless important that families try to resume normal lives, or as normal a life as may be possible after this sudden loss,” he said. “Without in any way intending to diminish the feelings of the families, it is hoped that this declaration will enable the families to obtain the assistance they need, in particular through the compensation process.”

The flight was carrying 239 people en route from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing, when it disappeared off radar after midnight on March 8. Authorities believe that the plane turned west and crossed Malaysia and then headed south, flying until its fuel was exhausted and crashing somewhere in the southern Indian Ocean.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.