KUALA LUMPUR, March 3 — Almost a year has passed since Flight MH370 vanished but Australian Danica Weeks still has no news for her children on the fate of their father who had boarded the ill-fated aircraft on March 8, 2014.

Angry and frustrated, Weeks said she has been fumbling along over the past year, struggling even to cope with the simplest tasks.

“I can only hope I might get something, anything… just anything,” Week said in between sobs in a teaser on tonight’s edition of “Dateline”, a current affairs television programme aired on Australia’s SBS One.

In her own words, Weeks said she has found it hardest to explain Paul’s absence to her children.

Her four-year-old son, she said, would scream at her angrily, demanding that she “bring my Daddy back now.”

“Staring into his eyes full of anger and sadness as your heart breaks, the only words I can conjure up are I’m sorry darling I can’t,” Weeks wrote in an article accompanying the teaser on SBS One’s website.

“And I can’t promise him I can, if only to relieve a small portion of his heartbreak, as I’ve tried everything to do that for them both, bring their Daddy home dead or alive, as me more than anyone knows everything they are missing out on.

“But how are they supposed to comprehend or understand that now, they just want him back, the huge void to be filled.

“And I know they say you should always tell children the truth, but what is the truth here? I wish desperately someone would tell me!” she continued.

Like many other relatives of the 239 people aboard the Malaysia Airlines (MAS) passenger jet, Weeks lashed out that the authorities here for either hiding information or not knowing anything themselves.

She said the Malaysian authorities have lacked transparency in their handling of the disaster, even treating MH370’s next-of-kin like they were “nuisances”.

“But where does that leave our children?” she asked. “Growing up under the banner of the world’s greatest aviation mystery or cover-up seen in the world thus far. I don’t know, and trust me every professional in the field doesn’t either!”

“Twelve months on, I know no more of what has happened to my soulmate, best friend, amazing father and husband, than I did on March 8th 2014.

“So I fumble along, struggling with life’s simple tasks in desperation, frustration and anger — not knowing what day it is, with all the special days now having passed full of sadness in Paul’s absence, but also bewilderment of not knowing why, the time is a blur,” Weeks wrote.

The full story on Weeks’ search for answers was aired tonight on Dateline.

MAS Flight MH370 disappeared on March 8 last year, dropping off radar coverage not long after taking off from the Kuala Lumpur International Airport en route to Beijing.

On January 29, Putrajaya declared Flight MH370 an air accident according to criteria set by the International Civil Aviation Organisation and that all the people on board were presumed dead.

This Sunday marks the first anniversary of the incident.