The Manila Times

Dutch judges to give long-awaited flight MH17 verdict

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A DUTCH court gives its verdict Thursday in the trial of four men over the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 above Ukraine in 2014, as tensions soar over Russia’s invasion eight years later.

The suspects — Russians Igor Girkin, Sergei Dubinsky, Oleg Pulatov and Ukrainian Leonid Kharchenko — will not be in court as they have refused to attend the two-and-a-half-year trial.

All 298 passengers and crew were killed when the Boeing 777 flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur was hit over separatist-held eastern Ukraine by what investigat­ors say was a missile supplied by Moscow.

Prosecutor­s have demanded life sentences for the suspects on charges of murder and causing an aircraft to crash, although the men are unlikely to serve time if convicted.

The suspects were allegedly part of Kremlin-backed forces and had key roles in bringing the BUK missile from a military base in Russia and deploying it to the launch site — even if they did not pull the trigger.

The panel of three Dutch judges will read out the verdict from 1230 GMT at a high-security court near Schiphol Airport, where the doomed plane took off on July 17, 2014.

It is expected to take around an hour and a half to read out.

‘Hunt them down’

Bereaved relatives are traveling from around the world to hear the ruling after a long fight for justice. The victims came from 10 countries, including 196 Dutch, 43 Malaysians and 38 Australian­s.

Families from several countries visited the Dutch national MH17 monument in the town of Vijfhuizen on the eve of the verdict.

“If they are guilty, the internatio­nal community should hunt them down,” Evert van Zijtveld, who lost his daughter Frederique, 19, his son Robert-Jan, 18, and his parents-in-law, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The crash triggered global outrage and sanctions against Moscow, with Ukraine’s famed sunflower fields littered with bodies and wreckage. Some victims, including children, were still strapped into their seats.

Eight years later, the region where MH17 crashed has become one of the key battlegrou­nds in Russia’s nearly nine-month-old war in Ukraine.

The trial opened in March 2020 with a somber reading of the names of all 298 victims, 196 of whom were from the Netherland­s.

The court also visited the twisted wreckage of the plane, which has been reconstruc­ted at a Dutch military base.

Three of the suspects are formally being tried in absentia, while Pulatov has had legal representa­tion at the trial and made a video statement in which he said he was not guilty.

‘Alternativ­e scenarios’

Prosecutor­s say Girkin, 51, a former Russian spy who became the so-called defense minister of the separatist Donetsk People’s Republic, was in contact with Russia to obtain the missile system.

He has denied the rebels were involved in downing MH17.

Dubinsky, 60, who has also been tied to Russian intelligen­ce, allegedly served as the separatist­s’ military intelligen­ce chief and was responsibl­e for giving orders about the missile.

Pulatov, 56, an ex-Russian special forces soldier, and Kharchenko, 50, who allegedly led a separatist unit, were subordinat­es who played a more direct role in transporti­ng the missile, prosecutor­s said.

The BUK missile had been identified as coming from the 53rd Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade from Kursk in Russia, the court heard.

Defense lawyers say the trial has been unfair.

They say prosecutor­s failed to prove a BUK missile brought down the jetliner, and have brought up “alternativ­e scenarios” such as that a Ukrainian jet shot it.

Moscow has denied all involvemen­t.

The verdict comes against the backdrop of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has sparked fears of a wider internatio­nal war.

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