A chorus of outrage reached a crescendo Monday as world
leaders demanded gun-toting pro-Russian rebels allow investigators to
access the MH17 crash scene.
Almost five days after a missile attack downed the
Malaysia Airlines jet, the Dutch prime minister said “all political,
economic and financial options” were on the table if access did not
improve to the area in eastern Ukraine. Mark Rutte told parliament his
government’s priority was to recover and identify the bodies of the
passengers, 193 of whom were Dutch. “It is clear that Russia must use
her influence on the separatists to improve the situation on the
ground,” Rutte added.
Malaysia’s transport minister highlighted that a team
of 133 experts and official flown in from his country had been prevented
from accessing the site by separatists in the self-declared “People’s
Republic of Donetsk.”
“Malaysia is very concerned that the sanctity of the
crash site has been severely compromised,” Liow Tiong Lai said after
arriving in Kiev. “Malaysia demands immediate and unrestricted access to
the crash site and guaranteed safety for its officials and those of the
international team. The international team is effectively being
prevented from entering the crash site. It is imperative that
international investigators and search and recovery personnel are
afforded full and unhindered access to this site.”
His comments echoed remarks by Australia’s Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who voiced concern on Monday that
the site looked more like a “garden clean-up” than a forensic
investigation. At least least 27 Australian passengers were among the
298 people aboard the Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777.
For months the Donetsk region of Ukraine where the jet
was shot down has been the scene of battles between state troops and
rebels wanting closer ties with Russia. Ukrainian army tanks were
reported to be launching an assault to break pro-Moscow rebels’ hold on
the eastern city of Donetsk on Monday. It was the first major outbreak of hostilities in the area since Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 was shot down.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday also urged separatists to allow international experts access to the crash site.
The Malaysian transport minister said the Ukrainian
government had been unable to establish a safe corridor to the area for
his country’s team, which includes forensics experts.
A mission from the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe has had limited access to the site, and on Monday
three members of a Dutch disaster victims identification team arrived in
Donetsk and were expected to visit a railway station near the crash
site where nearly 200 bodies have been stored in refrigerated wagons.
The rebels forced emergency workers at gunpoint to hand over 196 bodies recovered from the crash site and then had them loaded onto the train, Ukrainian officials and monitors told The Associated Press on Sunday.
On Saturday, the leader of the pro-Russia rebels told NBC News that some of the bodies of passengers aboard the downed jet were taken from the crash site to be “humane.”
However, Alexander Borodai insisted that his
pro-Moscow forces would not keep the humans remains from being returned
to Western officials, adding “we are ready to hand over the bodies to
those institutions that are on the side of our enemy.”
When asked by NBC News whether he was in contact with Russian
authorities, Borodai replied: “Officially, no.” Unofficially? “No
comment,” he said.(NBC)
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Fury Grows as Pro-Russian Rebels Block Access to MH17 Site |

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