Los Angeles Times

Still stonewalle­d in Ukraine

Investigat­ion is hindered a year after the downing of Malaysian jetliner

- By Carol J. Williams carol.williams@latimes.com Twitter: @ cjwilliams­lat

A year after 298 people aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 perished in an explosion over eastern Ukraine, the conflict behind the tragedy continues to thwart internatio­nal investigat­ors trying to determine who was responsibl­e.

A team of Dutch police and military investigat­ors were deployed last month to Ukraine’s Donetsk region to examine cellphone towers and communicat­ions data believed to show that Russia- backed militants claimed to have shot down the plane in the mistaken belief it was a Ukrainian military transport.

The investigat­ors, who were barred by separatist gunmen from accessing the telecom venues, had been searching for evidence to back Ukrainian government claims that they had intercepte­d communicat­ions from a Russian mercenary then in command of local militant forces.

Igor Girkin, aka Strelkov — the Shooter — had boasted on a social media website of downing a plane f lying at high altitude minutes after the Malaysia Boeing 777 exploded at 4: 20 p. m. on July 17, 2014, and rained debris and corpses over idyllic sunflower fields in rebel- held territory.

A Chicago- area lawyer filed suit against Girkin this week on behalf of the families of 17 victims, alleging conspiracy between the Russian special forces veteran and Kremlin officials accused by the West of instigatin­g the war between the Ukrainian government and the separatist­s.

“We are alleging that Mr. Girkin, as supreme commander of special units, conspired to order the shootdown of Malaysia 17,” Floyd Wisner, who specialize­s in aviation litigation, said Thursday in a telephone interview. His lawsuit, led by a South African woman whose late husband’s ticket was purchased for him by a U. S. employer, has standing in U. S. courts, Wisner said, under the Torture Victims Protection Act.

“We also allege that Mr. Girkin acted with either the actual, expressed, tacit or implied authority of the Russian government,” Wisner said.

Russian officials, who deny any role in the Ukraine war or the Malaysian jet disaster, have also signaled their intent to scuttle a proposal by Malaysia to establish a United Nations criminal tribunal to prosecute those eventually identified as responsibl­e for shooting down the airliner. Russia, which holds veto power at the U. N. Security Council, considers a criminal investigat­ion “ill- timed and counterpro­ductive,” Deputy Foreign Ministry Gennady Gatilov said of the proposed war crime court.

Formal determinat­ion of the cause of the disaster isn’t expected to be disclosed until October, as the draft version of a Dutch- led investigat­ion report was only recently distribute­d to government officials in the countries involved in the inquiry — Ukraine, Russia, Malaysia, Australia and the Netherland­s — for comment and proposed revision. But CNN reported Thursday that two sources who have seen the report said it attributes the plane’s destructio­n to a Russian- made BUK surface- to- air missile launcher fired from rebelheld territory.

The investigat­ors also reportedly noted that Malaysia Airlines, which suffered the loss of another Boeing jetliner four months earlier when MH- 370 went missing over the Indian Ocean, had failed to heed advice from other internatio­nal air carriers that pilots steer clear of eastern Ukraine, where several Ukrainian government aircraft had been downed after the separatist rebellion began in April 2014.

The militants in eastern Ukraine contend they are aiming to join their seized territory to Russia, as Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula was annexed last year. Russian officials have distanced themselves from the annexation claims, deeming the separatist­s’ action a civil war arising from mistreatme­nt of the Russian minority by the Ukrainian government in Kiev.

The Dutch Safety Board, which is leading the internatio­nal investigat­ion, issued a preliminar­y report nine months ago in which the plane was said to have been in contact with air traffic control only minutes before its destructio­n. That report said the plane did not issued a distress signal before it disappeare­d from radar after being struck by “highenergy objects from outside the aircraft,” consistent with being struck by a missile as it f lew at an altitude of 33,000 feet.

Investigat­ors from the Netherland­s, Australia and Malaysia were dispatched to the crash site near the village of Hrabove hours after the tragedy but were blocked by armed separatist­s for nearly two weeks, hampering the forensic specialist­s’ ability to document the debris field and collect the bodies of victims.

Most of the remains that were relatively intact were removed from the crash site by gunmen and stored in makeshift morgues. The rest, left lying in the scorching heat, were badly decomposed by the time the internatio­nal investigat­ors were able to reach them in early August.

“The integrity of the site has been compromise­d,” Malaysian Transporta­tion Minister Liow Tiong Lai complained of the militants’ disruption of the crash site, noting that gunmen had gone through victims’ belongings as well as disturbed wreckage and other evidence.

After investigat­ors recorded what was left of the crash scene, they removed the remaining bodies and aircraft remnants. A forensic laboratory was set up at a Dutch military base and all but a few victims were identified and their remains released to families.

The anniversar­y Friday of the disaster that struck the f light en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur occasioned reflection on its unanswered questions and pledges from leaders of the countries from which most victims hailed to see the perpetrato­rs identified and punished.

Moments of silence and solemn memorials in the home countries of the largest number of victims stirred anger and sadness among the families of the 196 Dutch victims, the 42 from Malaysia, including the 15- person crew, and 39 Australian­s headed home from European vacations or on their way to an internatio­nal conference in Melbourne on the global fight against HIV/ AIDS.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott called his nation’s lawmakers back to Canberra for the commemorat­ion Friday in Parliament, vowing to “continue to support families who deal with the pain of loss and who have a deep yearning for justice.”

 ?? Mstyslav Chernov
Associated Press ?? A BOY WAVES a f lag of the self- proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic at a memorial to the victims of the downed Malaysian jetliner near the village of Hrabove.
Mstyslav Chernov Associated Press A BOY WAVES a f lag of the self- proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic at a memorial to the victims of the downed Malaysian jetliner near the village of Hrabove.

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