mandag 12. oktober 2015

Malaysian MH17 - Skutt ned av russisk missil, men en peker ikke på hvem som er skurken - BBC

MH17 Ukraine disaster: Dutch to report on cause

  • 34 minutes ago
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  • From the sectionEurope

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MH17 crash


The Dutch Safety Board is to publish a final report on why Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 broke up over Ukraine in 2014, killing all 298 on board.
Preliminary findings say it was hit by "high-energy objects from outside the aircraft", fuelling speculation that a surface-to-air missile was responsible.
The West and Ukraine say Russian-backed rebels brought down the Boeing 777, while Russia blames Ukraine. But the report will not say who was to blame.
Russia is to issue its own report.
The plane - flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur - crashed in rebel-held eastern Ukraine on 17 July 2014 at the height of the conflict between government troops and the pro-Russian separatists.
The victims included 193 Dutch nationals and 10 Britons.

Four questions

The Dutch Safety Board is expected to present its findings first to the victims' families and relatives and then to reporters at the Gilze-Rijen military base in the Netherlands.
The board will also show parts of the aircraft that have been brought back from the rebel-held Donetsk region and reconstructed.

Parts of the wreckage of the Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 are displayed in a hangar at Gilze-Rijen airbase, Netherlands (March 2015)Image copyrightAP
Image captionParts of the wreckage from the Boeing-777 have been reconstructed at Gilze-Rijen airbase

Read more

Malaysia Airlines MH17 crash - In-depth report
What we know - What happened on on 17 July 2014
A reporter's story - Searching for truth at the crash site
Remembering the victims - Shared sadness and sunflowers

The report will look at four key issues:
  • what caused the plane to disintegrate in mid-air
  • why it was flying over the conflict region
  • why some relatives had to wait four days before receiving official confirmation that their loved ones were on board
  • to what extent passengers and crew were aware of what was happening in the final moments.
However, the report will not directly address the issue of who was responsible for the disaster.
This is because the board does not have the authority to apportion blame, under the rules governing international flight crash investigations.
A separate Dutch-led criminal investigation is still going on. Its findings are expected to be published in several months' time.

Did they suffer? Anna Holligan, BBC News, The Hague

The Dutch Safety Board might not provide a conclusive answer as to whether the crew and passengers were conscious in those final moments.
But the families hope this technical aviation report will at least end the speculation about what caused their deaths.
"Now, finally, we're getting answers from an organisation that can verify what actually happened," says Evert Van Zijtveld - deputy chairman of the MH17 Air Disaster Association, who lost his son, daughter and parents-in-law on flight MH17.
"But we still need proof. If they say our families felt something, we want evidence."

Prosecutors have suggested that the aircraft was most likely brought down by a Russian-made Buk surface-to-air missile - which experts say both Russian and Ukrainian armies possess.
The government in Ukraine and several Western officials have said the missile was brought from Russia and launched from the rebel-held part of Ukraine.
Russia denies the accusations, saying the plane was shot down by either a surface-to-air missile fired by Ukrainian forces or a Ukrainian fighter jet.
The Ukrainian government in Kiev rejects these claims as groundless.
In July, Russia vetoed a draft resolution at the UN Security Council to set up an international tribunal into the MH17 air disaster.
President Vladimir Putin said at the time the establishment of such a tribunal would be "premature" and "counter-productive".
Before the Dutch report is released on Tuesday, Russia's state arms producer Almaz-Antey - which makes Buk missiles - is expected to announce the results of its own investigation.
Senior Russian government officials have said the Dutch investigators have not been co-operating with Russian experts.
"A series of facts [about the shooting down] that were presented by Russia seem have not been taken into consideration - for reasons that we do not understand," Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for President Putin, said on Monday.
Aircraft debris field and recovered parts identified on plane
Image captionParts of the plane were found 8km (5 miles) from the main debris site

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