The Jerusalem Post

Investigat­ors identify Russian army unit in downing of Flight MH17

2014 disaster killed all 298 aboard • Prosecutio­n appeals to the public to help identify crew members, determine where order originated

- • By ANTHONY DEUTSCH

BUNNIK, Netherland­s (Reuters) – A missile system from the 53rd anti-aircraft brigade of the Russian Armed Forces was used to shoot down Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine in 2014, prosecutor­s investigat­ing the disaster said on Thursday.

The airliner was hit by a Russian-made missile on July 17, 2014, with 298 people on board, two-thirds of them Dutch, over territory held by pro-Russian separatist­s. All aboard died.

“The buk [missile system] that was used came from the Russian army, the 53rd brigade,” Chief Dutch Prosecutor Fred Westerbeke said. “We know that was used, but the people in charge of this buk, we don’t know.”

Investigat­ors appealed to the public to come forward and help identify members of the crew who operated the missile and determine how high up the chain of command the order originated.

“The Russian Federation didn’t help us in providing us the informatio­n we brought out into the open today,” Westerbeke said. “They didn’t give us this informatio­n, although a buk from their military forces was used.”

Russia has denied involvemen­t in the incident. There was no immediate comment from Moscow on the investigat­ive developmen­t.

In an interim update on their investigat­ion, prosecutor­s said they had trimmed their list of possible suspects from more than a hundred to several dozen.

He said investigat­ors were not yet ready to identify individual suspects publicly or to issue indictment­s, but that when they do he expects cooperatio­n, or a firm internatio­nal political response.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte cut short a trip to India to return in time for a cabinet meeting on Friday to discuss the latest findings in the inquiry, the ANP news agency reported.

A Joint Investigat­ion Team, drawn from Australia, Belgium, Malaysia, the Netherland­s and Ukraine, is gathering evidence for a criminal prosecutio­n in the downing of the plane.

Ukrainian Army General Vasyl Hrytsak, a member of the investigat­ion team, told Reuters it would be crucial to pinpoint who issued the orders to move the missile system.

“The next crucially important step is to identify some members of the military in the 53rd brigade of the Armed Forces of [Russia]... who can directly say who was involved in the transfer or operation of the buk.”

The Dutch Safety Board concluded in an October 2015 report that the Boeing 777 was struck by a Russian-made buk missile.

Dutch prosecutor­s said in September 2016 that 100 “persons of interest” had been identified in the investigat­ion, while Australian and Malaysian officials had initially expressed hope that suspects’ names would be made public in 2017.

Eventual suspects are likely to be tried in absentia in the Netherland­s after Russia used its veto to block a United Nations Security Council resolution seeking to create an internatio­nal tribunal to oversee criminal complaints stemming from the incident.

 ?? (Francois Lenoir/Reuters) ?? A DAMAGED MISSILE is displayed during a news conference yesterday in Bunnik, Netherland­s, by members of the Joint Investigat­ion Team of the 2014 MH17 crash that killed 298 people over eastern Ukraine.
(Francois Lenoir/Reuters) A DAMAGED MISSILE is displayed during a news conference yesterday in Bunnik, Netherland­s, by members of the Joint Investigat­ion Team of the 2014 MH17 crash that killed 298 people over eastern Ukraine.

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