Malaysia Airlines staff detained, attacked by angry relatives of MH370 passengers in China

A father whose son was aboard Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, cries as he asks a question during a briefing given by Malaysian representatives at Lido Hotel in Beijing on April 21, 2014. Angry relatives of people missing on Malaysia Airlines fli
A father whose son was aboard Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, cries as he asks a question during a briefing given by Malaysian representatives at Lido Hotel in Beijing on April 21, 2014. Angry relatives of people missing on Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 held some members of the carrier's staff for more than 10 hours in a hotel in Beijing, the airline said on Friday, April 25, 2014. -- FILE PHOTO: REUTERS

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Angry relatives of people missing on Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 held some members of the carrier's staff for more than 10 hours in a hotel in Beijing, the airline said on Friday.

The jetliner vanished on March 8 with 239 people on board while on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Many of the passengers were from China and their relatives have grown increasingly frustrated with the failure of a multinational search to find any trace of the plane.

More than 200 family members held 10 Malaysia Airlines staff after a briefing at a Beijing hotel, only releasing them early on Friday, the airline said. "Malaysia Airlines confirms that its staff were held at the Lido Hotel ballroom in Beijing by the family members of MH370 as the families expressed dissatisfaction in obtaining details of the missing aircraft," the airline said.

In another incident, a Chinese family member attacked a Malaysia Airlines security supervisor on duty at same hotel on Tuesday, the airline said. The member of staff sustained a light injury and the airline had filed a police report, it added.

The search for the missing airliner is likely to drag on for years, a senior United States defence official said earlier on Friday, as an underwater search for any trace of the plane's wreckage off west Australia appeared to have failed.

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