MH17: Dutch team return to ‘unsafe’ burned sites

Investigators make new checks on sites to prepare for full mission next month

mh17_image_300KYIV: Dutch investigators returned to the MH17 crash site in war-torn Ukraine on Friday visiting a location previously considered unsafe because of fighting with pro-Russian separatists.

“A 12-person team consisting of defence and police officers will remain in the area until March 28,” the Dutch justice ministry said in a statement.

The team, accompanied by a Dutch Safety Board official, “will assess the situation at so-called ‘burned sites’ with the aim of putting together a (full-blown) mission in April”, it said.

Burned sites refer to places where flaming wreckage from the Malaysia Airlines 777 fell after it was shot down on July 17, killing all 298 people on board, most of them Dutch.

The Netherlands has been charged with investigating the cause of the incident and identifying the dead.

Ukraine and the West have claimed that the airliner was shot down in the conflict-torn area by separatist fighters using a BUK surface-to-air missile supplied by Russia; the Russians deny the charges, pointing the finger at Ukraine.

The region to be investigated “includes an area northwest of the town of Petropavlivka, which a Dutch team could not visit previously because of the security situation”, the Dutch justice ministry said.

It added that Petropavlivka’s mayor had collected pieces of wreckage which will be picked up and taken to the city of Kharkiv.

Petropavlivka is around 10 kilometres west of Grabovo, the site where the main pieces of wreckage fell and the previous focus of the investigation.

Parts of the aircraft have been returned to the Netherlands where bereaved families earlier this month viewed the wreckage at the southern Gilze-Rijen airbase.

A Dutch television station on Thursday claimed it had proof that the Boeing 777 was shot down by a BUK missile based on an independent analysis of metal fragments one of its journalists removed from the crash site.

The Dutch Safety Board however issued a statement saying there was nothing to prove that the fragment came from the missile that brought the plane down, and that its own conclusions would be confirmed by “multiple sources and not only from fragments”.

Ukraine has signed a shaky peace deal with separatists in its troubled rebel-held east, where months of fighting have left more than 6,000 people dead.

AFP


Comments

Readers are required to have a valid Facebook account to comment on this story. We welcome your opinions to allow a healthy debate. We want our readers to be responsible while commenting and to consider how their views could be received by others. Please be polite and do not use swear words or crude or sexual language or defamatory words. FMT also holds the right to remove comments that violate the letter or spirit of the general commenting rules.

The views expressed in the contents are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of FMT.

Comments

Open all references in tabs: [1 – 3]