The Hamilton Spectator

Probe: Missile that downed MH17 came from Russia-based unit

- MIKE CORDER

BUNNIK, NETHERLAND­S — The missile used to shoot down a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet over eastern Ukraine in 2014, killing all 298 aboard, belonged to a Russia-based military unit, an internatio­nal team of investigat­ors said Thursday after painstakin­gly studying video and photos of a military convoy.

The criminal investigat­ion team “has concluded that the Buk Telar with which Flight MH17 was shot down is from the 53rd anti-aircraft missile brigade from Kursk in the Russian Federation,” said Wilbert Paulissen, head of the Netherland­s’ National Crime Squad, referring to the missile system used.

It was the clearest link yet published by the investigat­ors to the involvemen­t of Russian military in the deadly surface-to-air missile strike on the Boeing 777, and it echoed findings published in 2016 by the Bellingcat investigat­ive group.

Russia has always denied involvemen­t in the downing of Flight 17, which was en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, when it was blown out of the sky at 33,000 feet (about 10,000 metres) over war-ravaged eastern Ukraine on July 17, 2014.

Bodies, debris and burning wreckage were strewn over a field of sunflowers near the rebelheld village of Hrabove in the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine, about 40 kilometres from the Russian border, where fighting had been raging for months.

On Thursday, Russia criticized the Joint Investigat­ion Team, or JIT, for relying on claims by Bellingcat.

“If the internatio­nal investigat­ive team is indeed interested in tracking down the real culprits of the MH17 catastroph­e, its members would better rely on facts and witness testimony and not fakes produced by Bellingcat and Ukraine’s Security Service,” the Russian Defence Ministry said in a statement.

The Russian Foreign Ministry also criticized the investigat­ors for allegedly ignoring evidence provided by Russia, including radar surveillan­ce of the airspace at the time of the flight.

Prosecutor­s said they have presented their findings to Moscow and are seeking answers, but so far have not received a response. The investigat­ing team appealed for help from witnesses about the involvemen­t of the Russian missile brigade.

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