Two on plane list didn't board flight

Two Europeans thought to have been aboard a flight that's feared to have gone down off Vietnam say they are safe and their passports had been stolen.

An Italian and an Austrian feared to have died on a Malaysia Airlines passenger aircraft that's gone missing had their passports stolen and are safe.

Italian Luigi Maraldi, 37, was on holiday in Thailand and immediately phoned home after seeing on the news that an Italian with his name was on the vanished airliner - and before his father had seen the news.

"I turned on (rolling television news channel) RAI News24 and I saw what had happened. Thankfully, everything is OK. Luigi is on holiday, he's coming home in three weeks," his father told news agency Ansa on Saturday.

Last to know were the police officers who knocked on the door of the Maraldi family home in Cesena in northeastern Italy, fully expecting to have to impart some tragic news.

"We were prepared for the worst. It's never nice to have to go and tell people something like this," police inspector Paolo Campana told Ansa.

"But the parents told me that Luigi had phoned an hour earlier at 8am to reassure them after he had seen on Thai media the news of a death of an Italian with his name."

Maraldi had his passport stolen in Malaysia in August.

Malaysia Airlines meanwhile also contacted Austria's foreign ministry, saying that the name of an Austrian was also on the passenger list of the plane, a spokesman for the ministry said in Vienna.

"We contacted the person to whom the passport belonged. This person is in Austria and safe and sound. His passport was stolen in 2012 on a trip to Thailand," spokesman Martin Weiss said.

He gave no details of the person's name or age. He said the ministry had not been contacted about any other missing Austrians thought to have been on the flight.

Contact with Flight MH370 with 239 people on board en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing was lost somewhere between Malaysia's east coast and southern Vietnam, relaying no distress signal or other signs of trouble.

Six Australians and two New Zealanders were aboard the flight.

No trace had been found by nightfall on Saturday but Vietnam said its search planes spotted oil slicks 15km to 20km long in the sea, in the first hint at the Boeing 777-200's possible fate.


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Source: AAP

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