Missile destroys Malaysia
Airlines plane over Ukraine ,
killing 298 people
• Pro-Russia
rebels suspected of downing airliner
• Ukrainian
president condemns 'terrorist act'
• World leaders
react with shock and revulsion
Shaun
Walker in Kiev , Harriet Salem
in Grabovo and Alec Luhn in Moscow
The
Guardian, Friday 18 July 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/17/malaysia-airlines-plane-missile-attack-ukraine
The
president of Ukraine
has accused pro-Russia rebels in the east of the country of shooting down a
Malaysia Airlines jet with a ground-to-air missile, killing all 298 people on
board as the airliner exploded and rained down in fiery pieces over a rural
Ukrainian village.
The huge
loss of life threatens to have wide-ranging and unpredictable consequences,
coming just after the US
imposed further sanctions on Russia
for continuing to provide weapons to the rebels. Defence and security experts
said the Russian-made Buk surface-to-air missile system, known to be in the
hands of pro-Russia fighters in Ukraine ,
was most likely used.
"This
was not an 'incident', this was not a 'catastrophe', this was a terrorist
act," said Ukraine 's
president, Petro Poroshenko.
The US
vice-president, Joe Biden, said the plane appeared to have been "blown out
of the sky", while the Ukrainian security services released an audio
recording said to be rebel commanders realising their forces were responsible.
A partial
breakdown of passenger nationalities was released early on Friday, showing that
154 Dutch nationals, 43 Malaysians and 27 Australians were on board, along with
nine passengers believed to be from the UK, four each from Germany and Belgium,
three from the Philippines, one Canadian and 41 unverified. A group of
international HIV/Aids experts flying to Melbourne
were among those killed. Included in those numbers were the flight crew of 15,
all Malaysian.
The jet,
which was flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur , came down near the village of Grabovo ,
part of the area controlled by pro-Russia separatists, on Thursday.
It had been
flying 1,000ft above restricted airspace, according to the European air traffic
control body. Eurocontrol said Ukrainian authorities had banned aircraft from
flying at 32,000ft or below and the doomed aircraft had been cruising at
33,000ft – however this apparently still left it within range of the
sophisticated surface-to-air weaponry that pro-Russia forces have been using
recently in the Ukraine
conflict. All civilian flights have now been barred from the area of eastern Ukraine .
The
Australian prime minister, Tony Abbott, said the world should be "filled
with revulsion" at the plane's destruction and said "Russian proxies,
using Russian-supplied equipment" may have been responsible. Australia 's
foreign minister, Julie Bishop, said that if MH17 had been shot down it
amounted to an "unspeakable crime" and a full international
investigation must be allowed to take place. She said pro-Russia rebels, said
to have retrieved the plane's black box flight recording equipment, must hand
it over to authorities.
In brief
remarks the US
president referred to the "terrible tragedy" and said efforts were
under way to determine whether Americans had been killed. "The world is
watching," he said. "The United States will offer whatever
assistance we can to determine what happened and why." John Kerry, the
secretary of state, made a statement of condolence and called for a
"credible international investigation".
The British
foreign secretary, Philip Hammond, said: "We do believe that there were
British nationals on board the flight. We are working through passenger data,
cross-checking it and referencing it to establish exactly the numbers and
identities of those British nationals."
The field
next to the tiny hamlet was a scene of charred earth and twisted metal as
shocked local people milled around the scene. Body parts belonging to the 298
people on board were strewn around. The body of what appeared to be a young
woman was flung about 500m from the centre of the crash.
US
government officials confirmed to media outlets that a surface-to-air missile
brought down the plane. US
intelligence was reportedly still working to determine the exact location from
which the missile was fired, and whether it was on the Russian or the Ukrainian
side of the border.
Rebels in
the self-declared Donetsk
and Luhansk people's republics have shot down several Ukrainian planes and
helicopters in recent weeks. But they insisted they had no part in the downing
of MH17, claiming instead that Ukrainian fire was responsible.
On the
ground in Grabovo, a strong smell of aviation fuel and burnt rubber hung in the
air as dozens of pro-Russian separatist fighters milled around to control
access to the area in which workers from the emergency services were sifting
through the wreckage. A dozen fire engines were on the scene.
One local
resident, Alexander, was working in a field a few hundred metres from the crash
site. He said he feared the aircraft was going to fall on top of him. Another
farmer said he was on his tractor when he heard a loud bang. "Then I saw
the plane hit the ground and break in two – there was thick black smoke,"
he said.
In a
conflict that has not been short of unexpected twists, this was by far the most
shocking and most gruesome to date. The 298 people aboard MH17 had no
connection to the fighting except that their intercontinental flight was
travelling through airspace above the battle zone.
Questions were
being raised as to why Malaysia Airlines had continued to fly over such a
volatile region, where separatists were known to be shooting at aircraft.
Qantas, the Australian carrier, said it had been steering clear of the area by
400 nautical miles for several months. Malaysia Airlines said after the crash
that it had altered its flight paths and other airlines either did likewise or
emphasised they had already been taking alternative routes.
"With
immediate effect, all European flights operated by Malaysia Airlines will be
taking alternative routes avoiding the usual route," said a statement from
the airline. It added: "The usual flight route was earlier declared safe
by the International Civil Aviation Organisation. International Air
Transportation Association has stated that the airspace the aircraft was
traversing was not subject to restrictions."
Throughout
the conflict, the versions of violent incidents provided by Kiev
and the Donetsk
rebels have diverged wildly, with each side blaming the other for loss of life
and the shelling of residential areas.
Now, with
such a huge and unexpected loss of life, the stakes are immeasurably higher,
and both sides again rushed to claim the other was at fault.
Those
blaming pro-Russia rebels for the attack pointed to a post on a social media
site attributed to a top rebel commander which claimed to have downed a
Ukrainian transport plane around the same time as the first reports of MH17's
disappearance surfaced. The post was later deleted.
The US and
EU have blamed Russia for providing the separatists in eastern Ukraine with
logistical and military support, leading to a new set of White House sanctions
against Russian companies, introduced on Wednesday, as rhetoric coming out of
both Washington and Moscow has led to talk of a new cold war. Vladimir Putin's
spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the Guardian that any allegations of Russian
involvement in the tragedy were "stupidity".
He said the
Kremlin would not make a further statement because "no one knows" who
is responsible. Asked about the possibility of further US sanctions, Peskov said he could not rule it
out: "The United States
has recently been conducting a very nonconstructive policy, and their actions
are very unpredictable," he said.
Putin
himself, who on Thursday returned to Russia
from a summit of the Brics nations in Brazil , informed Barack Obama about
the incident.
"The
Russian leader informed the US
president of the report from air traffic controllers that the Malaysian plane
had crashed on Ukrainian territory, which had arrived immediately before the
phone call," said a statement released by the Kremlin.
According
to the statement, the pair spent most of the conversation discussing the
deterioration of US-Russian relations, and Putin expressed his "serious
disappointment" over the latest round of US sanctions against Russian
companies.
Later,
Putin chaired a meeting on the Russian economy which began with a minute's
silence, and laid the blame for the crash at Ukraine 's door: "There is no
doubt that the nation over whose airspace this happened bears responsibility
for the terrible tragedy," he said.
Obama said the downing of the plane looked
like "a terrible tragedy".
David Cameron, the British prime minister,
tweeted: "I'm shocked and saddened by the Malaysian air disaster.
Officials from across Whitehall
are meeting to establish the facts."
Putin later spoke by phone to the Malaysian
prime minister, Najib Razak, to express his "most sincere
condolences" to the families of the dead.
The crash came four months after a Malaysia
Airlines flight, MH370, vanished on a flight from Kuala
Lumpur to Beijing
with 239 people on board, two-thirds of them Chinese citizens. It has yet to be
found despite a huge search.
The first rumours of improbable tragedy
came as video appeared from villages nearby showing huge plumes of smoke rising
into the air, and aviation sources told a local wire agency that a plane had
been downed.
The first official confirmation came when
Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraine 's interior minister, wrote
on his Facebook page that the plane had indeed crashed in Ukrainian territory,
claiming it had been hit by a missile fired from a Buk launcher.
Malaysia Airlines soon confirmed the worst
fears, noting via its Twitter feed: "Malaysia Airlines has lost contact of
MH17 from Amsterdam .
The last known position was over Ukrainian airspace."
Igor Sutyagin, a Russian military
specialist at the London-based Royal United Services Institute, agreed that the
plane would almost certainly have been hit from a Buk, a vehicle-mounted
missile system first developed in the Soviet era. The Malaysian aircraft,was
beyond the range of Manpads – shoulder-launched missiles. Kalashnikov-carrying
Russian sympathisers in Ukraine
would not have had the expertise to fire them and would have needed either
specialists who had "volunteered" their services from Russia or
locally recruited specialists, he said, but noted that the rebels had been
firing at Ukrainian aircraft over the last week.
The Associated Press said one of its
journalists had seen a similar launcher near the town of Snizhne earlier on Thursday.
Russia's state-owned Channel One avoided
speculation of who might have been behind the plane crash in its first
bulletins on the subject, while the Kremlin-friendly Life News, whose reporters
were first on the scene, said it was likely to have been brought down by
Ukrainian fire, claiming that the rebels did not have any missile systems with
the capacity to down a plane travelling at that altitude.
However, a report on the website of Russian
state television from late June described how the rebels in Donetsk had taken control of a Ukrainian
missile defence facility which was equipped with Buk systems. The report said
that the rebels planned to "defend the sky over Donetsk " using the missile system.
On Thursday afternoon a social media site
attributed to Igor Strelkov, a Russian citizen who has emerged as the commander
of rebel forces in Donetsk, announced that the rebels had shot down an An-26
Ukrainian transport plane, and also that there was "information about a
second plane". The post was later removed.
'It's a civilian'
On Thursday night audio was being
circulated on social media, apparently released by Ukrainian security services,
purporting to be an intercepted conversation of pro-Russian rebels confirming
they had shot down a civilian jet.
The conversation is apparently between a
group leader and his superior and suggests that they initially thought they had
brought down a military aircraft but later realised their error.
The group leader, "Demon", tells
his boss: "A plane has just been shot down. [It was] 'Miner's' group. It
crashed outside Enakievo. Our men went to search for and photograph it. It's
smouldering."
After his men apparently inspect the crash
site, Demon reports back. "Kazakhs from the Chernunkhino checkpoint shot
down the plane. The plane disintegrated in mid-air … they found the first body.
It's a civilian."
He carries on: "I mean. It's
definitely a civilian aircraft."
His superior, nicknamed "Greek",
asks him: "Were there many people?"
Demon replies: "A fuckton. The debris
rained right into the yards."
Greek asks: "What's the
aircraft?" and is told: "I haven't figured it out yet. I haven't
reached the main section. I only looked at where the bodies began to fall.
There are remains of chair mounts, the chairs, the bodies."
Greek asks: "Any weapons there?"
and Demon says: "None at all. Civilian things, medical stuff, towels,
toilet paper." "Any documents?" asks Greek, and Demon, perhaps
realising what has just happened, replies: "Yes, an Indonesian student
from [a US ]
university."
Maior parte dos que seguiam a
bordo do voo da Malaysia eram holandeses
PÚBLICO
17/07/2014 - 20:20 (actualizado às 23:03)
Governo ucraniano refere que estavam no voo 80 crianças. As autoridades
holandesas ainda não tiveram acesso à lista de passageiros.
Começam a
apurar-se as nacionalidades das 298 pessoas que morreram a bordo do avião da
Malaysia Airlines que se despenhou nesta quinta-feira na Ucrânia.
Sabe-se que entre
as 298 vítimas - inicialmente foi adiantado que eram 295 - encontram-se 154
holandeses. No conjunto dos passageiros haveria, segundo o ministério ucraniano
do Interior, 80 crianças.
Está também confirmada a morte de 27
australianos e 23 malaios, 11 indonésios, quatro alemães, quatro belgas, três
filipinos e um canadiano. Informação anteriormente divulgada pelo ministério do
Interior ucraniano indicava que seguiam a bordo pelo menos 23 norte-americanos
e nove britânicos. O Governo francês confirmou que quatro dos passageiros eram
franceses. Ao início da noite ainda não tinha sido divulgada da nacionalidade
de mais de quatro dezenas de passageiros.
Todos os 15
tripulantes eram malaios.
“No mínimo” terão
morrido quatro franceses, afirmou, por sua vez, o ministro dos Negócios
Estrangeiros, Laurent Fabius, à margem de uma visita à Costa do Marfim. “É
necessário que seja lançada muito rapidamente uma investigação a este que é um
drama enorme”, disse o ministro, citado pela AFP.
O avião tinha
partido do aeroporto de Schipol, em Amesterdão, e destinava-se a Kuala Lumpur.
Por enquanto
ainda não há qualquer informação relativa à presença de cidadãos portugueses a
bordo do voo. Até ao momento, as autoridades holandesas "não tiveram
acesso à lista de passageiros", disse ao PÚBLICO o secretário de Estado
das Comunidades, José Cesário, que tem estado em contactos com Amesterdão.
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