Dutch court to try those who shot down plane
THE trials of any suspects arrested in the shooting down of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over war-torn eastern Ukraine will be held in the Netherlands, Dutch officials announced yesterday.
All 298 people on board were killed when the plane was hit by a missile on July 17 2014 on a flight from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur.
A joint international investigation has determined that the Boeing 777 jet was hit by a Russianmade BUK missile fired from rebel-held territory, but a separate criminal probe has yet to arrest any suspects.
Now the countries leading the joint investigation team (JIT) – Australia, Belgium, Malaysia, the Netherlands and Ukraine – have agreed that any trials will be held in the Netherlands.
The countries “decided the suspects should be prosecuted in the Netherlands, a process that will be rooted in ongoing international cooperation and support”, Dutch Foreign Minister Bert Koenders said in a statement.
“This cooperation is vital, given the complexity of this case,” he added, highlighting that eastern Ukraine was a conflict zone, “the scene of heavy fighting . . . which is still difficult to access”.
The investigation was also hampered by “a great deal of disinformation and attempts to discredit the investigation”.
Most of the victims were Dutch, but Koenders said that in total they came from 17 countries spread across five continents.
Dutch prosecutors, who have been leading the criminal probe, had asked the government to clarify the legal framework for any prosecutions in order to proceed in the case.
Investigators concluded in September that a BUK missile, which had been transported over the border from Russia shortly before the incident, was fired from a field in eastern Ukraine, then controlled by pro-Russian rebels, and hit the plane.
But it stopped short of saying who pulled the trigger, and Russia has repeatedly denied any involvement, putting the blame on Kiev.
Preliminary criminal findings have said about 100 people are under investigation for playing “an active role” in the disaster.
Ukraine and the Netherlands will sign a treaty tomorrow to allow criminal prosecutions to be transferred to Dutch courts. — AFP