Calgary Herald

FLIGHT 17: Russian media points finger at Ukraine

Wild reports offer various theories on crash

- LAURA MILLS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MOSCOW — An assassinat­ion attempt against Russian President Vladimir Putin. A desperate ploy to draw the West into the battle for Ukraine’s east. A botched mission to commit mass murder against Russian citizens.

Russian news consumers are getting plenty of explanatio­ns for the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, which killed 298 people. While they vary wildly in content, all point the finger at Ukraine. None admits the possibilit­y that Russia may bear responsibi­lity.

The story of the airline tragedy that is unfolding for Russians differs starkly from the one that people are following in the West. As U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told American TV viewers that rebels shot down the plane with Russian weaponry, Russians were being fed a diet of scenarios about forces in Ukraine conspiring to commit an atrocity in the skies.

Yekaterina Andreyeva, one of Russia’s most famous TV anchors, delved into one theory hours after news of the crash broke: Putin, travelling home from Brazil, passed along the same flight path as the Malaysian passenger jet less than one hour before it was hit — suggesting an assassinat­ion attempt.

“The presidenti­al plane and the Malaysian Boeing crossed paths at the exact point and at the same flight level,” said Andreyeva. “The shape of the plane and the length are absolutely similar, and their colour would appear almost identical at such a distance.”

By Friday morning, the assassinat­ion theory was replaced by other scenarios.

One focused on the Buk missile launcher that Ukraine says brought down the plane. Stateowned Rossiya TV pinned blame on Kyiv by saying the rebels did not own one, while Ukraine recently deployed a Buk launcher to the area.

Meanwhile, an Associated Press journalist saw a Buk launcher — which rebels have bragged about owning in social media — in rebelheld territory near the crash site hours before the plane was brought down.

Rossiya further said that the red, white and blue of the Malaysia Airlines logo “resembles the Russian tricolour” — hinting at a Ukrainian attempt to blow up a Russian pas- senger jet.

Komsomolsk­aya Pravda, Russia’s most-read tabloid, took another tack. It claimed that Ukrainian air traffic controller­s redirected the Malaysia Airlines plane to fly directly over the conflict zone.

On Tuesday, the paper appeared to suggest the jetliner was shot down by a Ukrainian military plane with American help: “A Ukrainian attack plane and an American spy satellite were following the fallen Boeing,” a report claimed.

Russia’s media have suggested Ukrainian authoritie­s orchestrat­ed the downing to make it look like a rebel attack, in hopes it would be the catalyst for luring Western powers into military interventi­on.

Nationalis­t politician­s are also fuelling conspiracy theories.

“The fact that the plane fell is an American provocatio­n,” firebrand member of Parliament Vladimir Zhirinovsk­y told Vesti FM radio station. “They always do everything possible to blame Russia. It’s possible that there were corpses that were placed ahead of time in the seats of the plane.”

Russian state-controlled television, which is where a majority of Russians get their news, tends to toe the official line and abrupt changes in language on the air can reflect changes in Kremlin strategy. In June, Putin began soft-pedalling his rhetoric on Ukraine after recognizin­g May 25 presidenti­al elections, in an apparent attempt to stave off Western sanctions.

After the airline tragedy, Putin led the shift to an aggressive tone.

“This tragedy would not have happened if there were peace on this land, if the military actions had not been renewed in southeast Ukraine,” Putin said. “And, certainly, the state over whose territory this occurred bears responsibi­lity for this awful tragedy.”

Outrage is growing in the West over what appears to be a bungled start to the investigat­ion. Rebels allowed a group of monitors from the Organizati­on for Security and Co-operation in Europe only a superficia­l inspection of the crash site on Saturday before firing warning shots when two Ukrainian members of the group attempted to study wreckage.

In Russia, meanwhile, news reports repeat that the rebels are cooperatin­g with the observers — and blame Kyiv for stalling the arrival of internatio­nal investigat­ors.

 ?? Dmitry Lovetsky/The Associated Press ?? Four days after Flight 17 was shot down, internatio­nal investigat­ors are being hindered by pro-Russia fighters who control the territory.
Dmitry Lovetsky/The Associated Press Four days after Flight 17 was shot down, internatio­nal investigat­ors are being hindered by pro-Russia fighters who control the territory.

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