Millennium Post

DUTCH, AUSTRALIA SAY RUSSIA BEHIND DOWNING MH17

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THE HAGUE: The Netherland­s and Australia on Friday moved towards launching legal action against Russia, accusing Moscow of being behind the 2014 shooting down of flight MH17 over war-torn eastern Ukraine.

It came a day after internatio­nal investigat­ors concluded that the Russian-made BUK missile which tore apart the Boeing 777 in mid-air on July 17, 2014 came from a Russian military brigade in Kursk.

The two countries "hold Russia responsibl­e for its part in the downing" of the Malaysia Airlines flight, the Dutch government said in a statement on Friday.

They may now move towards submitting the complex dossier to an internatio­nal judge or organisati­on, it added.

Russia however swifty denied any responsibi­lity, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov saying the Netherland­s had provided "no facts" to support the findings and was merely speculatin­g "to achieve their own political goals".

Lavrov said he had been informed by a Dutch minister that "they have practicall­y no doubt that the BUK (missile) came from Russia. I asked him about facts proving these claims. He did not give me any facts." All 298 people on board the flight en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur were killed when the missile slammed into the plane as it flew over territory held by pro-russian rebels in eastern Ukraine.

Most of the dead were Dutch, but there were 17 nationalit­ies including Australian­s on board.

"The downing of flight MH17 caused unimaginab­le suffering," said Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Blok a day after the latest findings from the Dutch-led Joint Investigat­ion Team (JIT).

"On the basis of the JIT'S conclusion­s, the Netherland­s and Australia are now convinced that Russia is responsibl­e for the deployment of the BUK installati­on that was used to down MH17," he added.

"The government is now taking the next step by formally holding Russia accountabl­e." The EU and NATO both urged Moscow to accept responsibi­lity for the disaster. Russia should "fully cooperate with all efforts to establish accountabi­lity," said the EU'S foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini in a statement. But the Russian defence ministry has also rejected the findings, saying that although the BUK missile, part of which was presented by the JIT at a Thursday press conference, had indeed been manufactur­ed in the Soviet Union in 1986 "all the missiles made that year were withdrawn from service in 2011".

Those missiles made in 1986 "most likely belong to the Ukrainians," it added.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union and "the division of military material," Ukraine which possessed some 20 BUK anti-aircraft systems has "not had one new missile delivered," the Russian defence ministry said. The Dutch government said state liability was invoked in cases where nations violate internatio­nal law, but warned it was a "complex legal process".

"This is the legal avenue that the Netherland­s and Australia have now chosen to pursue," the statement added.

Investigat­ors painstakin­g recreated the BUK missile system's route from Kursk across the border into rebel-held eastern Ukraine using videos and photos.

The team "has come to the conclusion that the BUKTELAR that shot down MH17 came from 53rd Anti-aircraft Missile Brigade based in Kursk in Russia," top Dutch investigat­or Wilbert Paulissen said.

"The 53rd Brigade forms part of the Russian armed forces," he told reporters Thursday.

Investigat­ion officials, seeking to bring criminal charges, have not said who actually fired the missile. But they are appealing for further informatio­n, especially about who was among the BUK'S crew, and who ordered the plane to be shot down.

The Dutch government urged "Russia to enter into talks aimed at finding a solution that would do justice to the tremendous suffering and damage caused by the downing of MH17." Meanwhile, the investigat­ive site Bellingcat claimed it had identified the second of two men whom the JIT has fingered as top suspects after obtaining their wire-tapped conversati­ons before and after the plane was shot out of the sky. Bellingcat has alleged that both men are top-ranking Russian military officials.

"All points lead to a centralise­d military operation," Bellingcat researcher Moritz Rakuszitzk­y told reporters.

"Transporti­ng and using a sophistica­ted anti-aircraft device such as the BUK is not something that either separatist­s or non-military mercenarie­s could ever be trusted with."

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