The Philippine Star

MH17 families steel for legal fight on 2nd anniversar­y

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KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) — The families of the 298 people who died when flight MH17 was downed over Ukraine are steeling themselves for a slew of bitter legal battles, on the eve of the tragedy’s second anniversar­y.

Sunday marks the deadline for relatives to launch action against Malaysia Airlines, which operated the passenger jet that was shot down with a surface-air-missile over wartorn eastern Ukraine on July 17, 2014.

The Boeing 777 was on a routine flight between Amsterdam and Kuala Lumpur when it was hit by a Russianmad­e BUK missile, fired from territory held by pro-Russian separatist­s locked in a fierce conflict with Kiev.

Dozens of Dutch relatives are close to filing a lawsuit by the weekend if negotiatio­ns fail to secure compensati­on for “psychologi­cal trauma,” news reports said.

A 1999 convention allows bereaved families to launch claims against airlines for up to two years, but “psychologi­cal trauma” does not qualify.

Malaysia Airlines “will also be reluctant to set a precedent” if it pays damages for psychologi­cal trauma, added Pablo Mendes de Leon, an air and space law professor at Leiden University.

The ailing Malaysian national carrier is already facing a legal challenge by families of six crew members who are blaming the airline for the tragedy.

Yet another claim could be added this week, lawyer Mathew Thomas Philip told AFP.

Elsewhere, a suit by 33 next- of- kin from Australia, New Zealand and Malaysia was filed against Russia and President Vladimir Putin in the European Court of Human Rights in May.

The claimants are suing for $7.6 million for each lost relative, their lawyer Jerry Skinner said.

Thirty families are also getting ready for a US-based lawsuit against “several people and entities that support the separatist­s on Ukrainian soil,” lawyer James Healy-Pratt told AFP.

Other relatives want a pro- Russian separatist leader to pay 779 million euros in damages, while the mother of a German victim is suing Kiev for allowing passenger planes to fly through its airspace — even though it knew there was an ongoing war.

Sunday marks the second anniversar­y of the crash that saw 298 passengers — the majority of them Dutch — and crew lose their lives.

The largest gathering will be in the small Dutch town of Vijfhuizen near Amsterdam’s Schiphol internatio­nal airport, where relatives plan a future memorial for the victims.

At the gathering, the names of all the victims will be read and there will be a minutes’ silence, the organizers have said.

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