Whanganui Chronicle

Murder finding over flight MH17 ‘changes nothing’

Kiwi victim’s mum says war in Ukraine added insult

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The mother of a Kiwi killed in the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 says yesterday’s verdict from a Dutch court convicting two Russians and a pro-moscow Ukrainian separatist of the murders of 298 people does “nothing” to bring justice or closure.

Wellington­ian Robert Ayley, 29, was on board when the plane was shot down in eastern Ukraine in July 2014. Fellow New Zealander Mary Menke, who lived in Australia, also died in the crash.

Ayley’s mother Wendy told Newstalk ZB her grief is a physical deformity and will always be part of her life.

“The verdict changes nothing. I feel guilty saying that because it kind of negates a lot of hard work that a lot of people have done, and their commitment to what they perceive as seeking justice for the families.

“But for us nothing’s changed with the outcome of this trial, and there’s that kind of background insult that the war in escalated from the events of 2014 and is ongoing and more lives are being lost and there’s absolutely nothing to be gained from any of this.”

She shared her sense of loss with others who had been bereaved, for whatever reason.

“When you lose somebody you love you don’t ever really recover from that. That goes for the families of the Ukrainians that have been killed. But it goes for the Russian families as well.

“The Russians that have been killed, fighting for something that they probably didn’t want, they just wanted to get on with their lives, like everybody else.”

She said she is not looking for answers or closure, but that the guns would fall silent.

Ayley was heading home to Wellington after a month in Europe when he boarded the flight in Amsterdam bound for Kuala Lumpur. He left behind a wife, Sharlene, and two sons who live in New Zealand.

Her grandsons brought comfort, Wendy Ayley said.

“I look at the boys, I look at my grandsons and I look at the fact they’re growing up and becoming lovely people and that’s what the world should be about.”

The other New Zealander killed in the atrocity, Menke, 65, was returning to her home in Australia with her Dutch-born husband Gerry when the plane was downed.

They were travelling home after celebratin­g his 70th birthday with family and friends in the south of France.

The Dutch court convicted the three in absentia and sentenced them to life imprisonme­nt, while one Russian was acquitted because of a lack of evidence.

The court also held that Moscow in 2014 had overall control of the separatist Donetsk People’s Republic in eastern Ukraine, from where it said the attack on the plane was launched.

Presiding Judge Hendrik Steenhuis said evidence presented by prosecutor­s at a trial that lasted more than two years proved that the Boeing 777 flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur was brought down by a Buk missile fired by pro-moscow Ukrainian fighters on July 17, 2014.

In the courtroom, families of victims blinked away tears as Steenhuis said their lives were changed forever on that day.

He described the torment of family members who had to wait for the remains of their relatives.

“A piece of bone from a hand. A piece of leg or a foot. In two cases, no parts of a loved one returned.”

The three men, who can appeal, did not attend their trial at a tightly guarded courtroom on the edge of Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport, from where the doomed plane left.

Prosecutor­s had sought life sentences for all four.

There had been fears that the weight of evidence was impressive but would not necessaril­y lead to conviction­s. Steenhuis, however, cited extremely detailed evidence showing where the Buk was fired from, the burns it left on a field, and how it moved around eastern Ukraine. He also went into deep details on the roles of the suspects.

“There is plentiful evidence” to support theory that the missile was shot from the field in rebel-held territory, Steenhuis said.

“There is no reasonable doubt possible,” he added, dismissing defence arguments that something might have happened to the plane.

The court ruled that the three men — Russians Igor Girkin and Sergey Dubinskiy, and Ukrainian separatist Leonid Kharchenko — worked together to bring the Buk missile system from a Russian military base into Ukraine and bring it into position for its launch.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the court decision was a vital first step in assigning responsibi­lity for the crime but added more prosecutio­ns and conviction­s were needed.

“It is necessary that those who ordered it also find themselves in the dock, because impunity leads to new crimes,” he said on Twitter.

 ?? ?? New Zealander Robert Ayley, who died on Flight MH17, and wife Sharlene had two sons.
New Zealander Robert Ayley, who died on Flight MH17, and wife Sharlene had two sons.

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