The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

‘Russian-made missile took down MH17’

Launcher came from and was returned to Russia; Buk rocket was fired from rebel-held area; Moscow maintains it was not involved

- TOBY STERLING & ANTHONY DEUTSCH

INTERNATIO­NAL PROSECUTOR­S PUBLISH PROBE FINDINGS

MALAYSIA AIRLINES flight MH17 was shot down by a missile fired from a launcher brought into Ukraine from Russia and located in a village held by pro-russian rebels, internatio­nal prosecutor­s said on Wednesday.

The findings counter Moscow’s suggestion that the passenger plane, en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur in July 2014, was brought down by Ukraine’s military rather than the separatist­s. All 298 people on board, most of them Dutch, were killed.

The conclusion­s were based on thousands of wiretaps, photograph­s, witness statements and forensic tests during more than two years of inquiries into an incident which led to a sharp rise in tensions between Russia and the West.

Among the key findings were: the plane was hit by a Russian-made Buk-9m38 missile; the missile was fired from the rebelheld village of Pervomaysk in eastern Ukraine; and the launcher was transporte­d into Ukraine from Russia.

“This Buk trailer came from the territory of the Russian Federation, and after the launch it was returned again to the territory of the Russian Federation,” said Wilbert Paulissen, chief investigat­or with the Dutch police.

The Ukrainian government said the findings pointed to Russia’s “direct involvemen­t”. Russia — which has always denied Moscow or pro-russian rebels were responsibl­e — rejected the prosecutor­s’ conclusion­s, saying they were not supported by technical evidence and the inquiry was biased.

Earlier Wednesday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said its radar data had “identified all flying objects which could have been launched or were in the air over the territory controlled by rebels at that moment”.

“The data is clear-cut ... there is no rocket. If there was a rocket, it could only have been fired from elsewhere,” he said.

The investigat­ors, from the Netherland­s, Australia, Belgium, Malaysia and Ukraine, said they had not had access to Moscow’s radar images but would gladly include a Russian contributi­on to the inquiry.

Ukrainian and Western officials, citing intelligen­ce intercepts, have long blamed the pro-russian rebels for the incident, which played a big part in a decision by the European Union and US to impose sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine conflict and has damaged Dutch-russian economic ties.

In reaction to the investigat­ors’ findings, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte called on Russia “to lend all possible cooperatio­n” to the inquiry, which will now shift its focus to identifyin­g individual suspects.

Prosecutor­s said that while they had not brought charges against culprits or establishe­d a court, they had identified 100 individual­s of interest in relation to the incident on July 17, 2014. “Of a number of them, we know pretty exactly what their role and position was, for instance those who organised the arrival of the Buk rocket and who were in charge of the transport that day,” said Fred Westerbeke, chief prosecutor at the Netherland­s National Prosecutor’s office.

“We know exactly what happened, but who exactly was in charge, and whether it was done intentiona­lly, there the investigat­ion is still continuing,” Westerbeke said.

He declined to specify the nationalit­y of any potential suspects, and called on witnesses to come forward and help determine who gave the order to shoot the plane down.

At the time of the incident, pro-russian separatist­s were fighting Ukrainian government forces in the region.

The Boeing 777 broke apart in mid-air, flinging wreckage over several kilometres (miles) of fields in rebel-held territory.

REUTERS

 ?? Reuters/file ?? The findings challenge Moscow’s suggestion that the flight was brought down by the Ukrainian military.
Reuters/file The findings challenge Moscow’s suggestion that the flight was brought down by the Ukrainian military.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India