The families of passengers and crew on missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 have gathered to remember their loved ones two years after the plane's disappearance.
And their message has been overwhelming: Keep searching for the missing airliner.
It comes as a third piece of debris potentially linked to the plane has turned up on an island where the only confirmed piece was found last year.
Two years ago, the families reacted in shock and desperation as Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak announced the Malaysia Airlines flight had gone missing.
"With deep sadness and regret that I must inform you that, according to this new data, flight MH370 ended in the southern Indian Ocean."
Now, attending a small memorial event in Kuala Lumpur ahead of the second anniversary of the plane's disappearance, the families say the search must continue beyond a June deadline.
A white, metre-long chunk of metal found off Mozambique on Africa's east coast recently has rekindled hope for many that one of aviation's biggest mysteries can still be solved.
The only confirmed piece from the plane was found in July on the shores of Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean.
And last week, the member of a beach clean up crew who found that piece reportedly found a third piece of debris which could potentially be linked to the flight.
Grace Subathirai Nathan's mother was on board the airliner when it vanished after taking off from Kuala Lumpur en route to Beijing on March 8, 2014, with 239 people aboard.
Ms Nathan is demanding investigators go back over mistakes made early on in the case.
"Although we're still waiting to find out whether the debris is, in fact, from MH370, if it is, even if it isn't, it just goes to show that, like, they should just keep searching."
Australian officials said in August that initial drift models of where debris from the jet might first wash up had incorrectly identified Indonesia as the most likely location.
A meeting is now set for June between Australia, Malaysia and China to determine whether to extend the search.
Most of the passengers were from those three countries.
But their families are calling for investigations to continue after the recent discoveries, asking for efforts to now focus on the south-east African coast.
During the memorial in the Malaysian capital, family and friends have called for what they called the three R's -- "re-investigate, re-evaluate, restart."
Accompanied by poignant musical and dance performances, they made an impassioned plea for search efforts to continue until the plane is found.
The wife of MH370 in-flight supervisor Patrick Gomes, Jacquita Gonzales, says the missing cannot be forgotten.
"They can stop the search, but where do we stop the feeling of loss? We have not got our family members back yet."
MH370 vanished from radar screens very shortly after taking off from Kuala Lumpur.
Investigators believe it was then flown thousands of miles off course before eventually crashing into the ocean off the west coast of Australia.
A 584-page interim report into the disappearance of the plane, released on the first anniversary, provided details on how radar tracked the plane going off course.
However, it did not identify a definitive cause for the disappearance, adding there was nothing suspicious in the financial, medical nor personal histories of the pilots or crew.
The next interim report will be released tomorrow on the anniversary.
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