The Arizona Republic

3 sentenced to life in 2014 jet downing

- Mike Corder and Raf Casert

SCHIPHOL, Netherland­s – A Dutch court on Thursday convicted three men of murder for their role in shooting down a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet with a Russian surface-to-air missile, killing all 298 people aboard the aircraft as it flew over a separatist-controlled region of eastern Ukraine in 2014.

The conviction­s, along with the life sentences handed to the two Russians and a pro-Moscow Ukrainian who were tried in absentia, were seen as directing the blame for the jet’s downing at the government of Russian President Vladimir Putin, even though the Kremlin has always denied any connection to it.

The trial, held in a courtroom near Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport where Flight MH17 took off for Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, put the Kremlin’s involvemen­t in the separatist conflict in eastern Ukraine at the heart of the case.

Against the geopolitic­al upheaval caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine this year, the court held that Moscow in 2014 had overall control of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, the separatist area where the missile was launched.

Presiding Judge Hendrik Steenhuis said evidence presented by prosecutor­s in the trial that lasted more than two years proved the Boeing 777 was

brought down by a Buk missile fired by pro-Moscow Ukrainian fighters on July 17, 2014. The crash scattered wreckage and bodies over farmland and fields of sunflowers.

The 298 passengers and crew came from more than a dozen countries, although nearly 200 were Dutch citizens.

As relatives of the victims blinked away tears, Steenhuis described their torment of having to wait for the remains of their loved ones to be returned to them.

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

Russians Igor Girkin and Sergey Dubinskiy,

and Ukrainian separatist Leonid Kharchenko, who remain at large, were convicted for their role in bringing the Buk missile system from a Russian military base into Ukraine and putting it into position for its launch.

Russian Oleg Pulatov, the only suspect represente­d by defense lawyers at the trial, was acquitted for lack of evidence.

Prosecutor­s said the convicted men have two weeks to file an appeal.

The court awarded damages to the families of more than $16.5 million but it is unclear just who would pay that sum.

Relatives welcomed the verdict even though it is unlikely any of the three convicted men will serve their sentences.

For the families, the ordeal of attending the trial was compounded by the fact that it was held near the airport where their loved ones embarked on the fateful flight. Outside the court, planes could be heard taking off and landing nearby on a cold, gray day.

Prosecutor­s focused their case on the circumstan­ces behind the downing of the plane, saying that from midMay 2014, the Donetsk People’s Republic “was actually controlled from the Russian Federation.”

Several families of victims were relieved the court pointed to Russia’s involvemen­t.

 ?? PHIL NIJHUIS/AP ?? Hundreds of family members of people killed on the plane traveled to the Amsterdam court to hear the verdict on Thursday.
PHIL NIJHUIS/AP Hundreds of family members of people killed on the plane traveled to the Amsterdam court to hear the verdict on Thursday.

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