Translate

29 October 2014

MH17 aircraft might have been shot down from the air but a ground-to-air missile attack is more likely says prosecutors




MH17 prosecutor open to theory another plane shot down airliner - Der Spiegel

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Dutch prosecutors investigating the crash of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 believe the aircraft might have been shot down from the air but that a ground-to-air missile attack is more likely, a senior prosecutor said in a German media interview.
The Russian government has always said it has radar imagery proving the fully laden Boeing 777 was shot down by a Ukrainian military aircraft flying in its vicinity, but Western officials have never publicly accepted this scenario.
In an interview published by German newsmagazine Der Spiegel on Monday, prosecutor Fred Westerbeke said the Dutch would ask Moscow to provide the information that had led them to believe a Ukrainian aircraft was nearby.
"Based on the information available, a shooting-down by a ground-to-air missile is the most likely scenario, but we aren't closing our eyes to the possibility that it could have happened differently," Der Spiegel quoted him as saying.
"We are preparing a request to Moscow for information ... including the radar data with which the Russians wanted to prove that a Ukrainian military jet was nearby," he added.
In the days after the crash, the United States said it had evidence proving that the aircraft was brought down by a ground-to-air missile fired by Russian-backed forces occupying the area in eastern Ukraine where its wreckage now lies.
An interim report issued by the Dutch Safety Board, which investigates air crashes, listed several passenger jets in flight MH17's vicinity, but no military aircraft that would have been capable of shooting it down.
The fully loaded Boeing 777 airliner crashed over eastern Ukraine on July 17, killing all 298 people on board, more than two-thirds of whom were Dutch citizens.
Dutch authorities leading the international investigation of the crash have come under fierce criticism in the Netherlands in recent weeks from relatives of victims and lawmakers who say not enough progress has been made in identifying the perpetrators.

Popular Posts - Last 7 days

Popular Posts - Last 30 days

Blog Archive

LIVE VISITOR TRAFFIC FEED

A visitor from Shah alam viewed 'Indonesia gagalkan cubaan seludup migran ke Malays' 52 mins ago
A visitor from Batu caves viewed 'BEST FBKL' 1 hr 2 mins ago
A visitor from Muscat viewed 'PERONDA LEBUHRAYA KONGSI DETIK IBU GAJAH CUBA SELA' 1 hr 25 mins ago
A visitor from Kuala lumpur viewed 'PDRM bekerjasama Interpol atur rakam percakapan an' 1 hr 46 mins ago
A visitor from Oslo viewed 'Khidmat Nurul Izzah sebagai 'panglima perang' PKR ' 1 hr 58 mins ago
A visitor from Oslo viewed 'JKDM Selangor patahkan empat cubaan seludup termas' 2 hrs 25 mins ago
A visitor from Oslo viewed 'Kegembiraan lapan sekawan bertukar tragedi, satu l' 2 hrs 25 mins ago
A visitor from Kuala lumpur viewed 'Pertembungan Nurul Izzah, Rafizi persaingan sihat ' 2 hrs 27 mins ago
A visitor from Hemel hempstead viewed 'Kenderaan rasmi pejabat Ahli Parlimen Sri Gading d' 2 hrs 44 mins ago
A visitor from Kuala lumpur viewed 'US & China agree to 90 day pause |' 2 hrs 58 mins ago