Advertisement

Bittersweet justice for families of victims killed in MH17 mass murder

A Dutch court convicted three men of murder for their role in the 2014 shooting down of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 over Ukraine, and sentenced them to life in prison in absentia.

Nov 18, 2022, updated Nov 18, 2022
The reconstructed front of the Malaysia Airlines plane that was downed by a missile over Ukraine, killing 298 people, Gilze-Rijen Air Force Base, The Netherlands, Oct. 13, 2015. Parts of the cockpit and business class were reconstructed from wreckage retrieved from Ukraine and brought to the Netherlands where the crash investigation was based. (AAP Image/Lloyd Jones)

The reconstructed front of the Malaysia Airlines plane that was downed by a missile over Ukraine, killing 298 people, Gilze-Rijen Air Force Base, The Netherlands, Oct. 13, 2015. Parts of the cockpit and business class were reconstructed from wreckage retrieved from Ukraine and brought to the Netherlands where the crash investigation was based. (AAP Image/Lloyd Jones)

A fourth man was acquitted..

MH17 was a passenger flight that was shot down over eastern Ukraine on July 17, 2014, killing all 298 passengers and crew, including 38 Australians.

“Only the most severe punishment is fitting to retaliate for what the suspects have done, which has caused so much suffering to so many victims and so many surviving relatives,” Presiding Judge Hendrik Steenhuis said on Thursday, reading a summary of the ruling.

Families of victims stood weeping and wiping away tears in the courtroom as Steenhuis read the verdict.

Several families of the Australian victims were in the courtroom to hear the verdict.

Matthew Horder, whose parents Howard and Susan were killed in the attack, told the ABC the court provided the answers he was seeking.

“The actions we’ve come to learn about, the BUK missile that downed Mum and Dad’s plane, is true,” he said.

“A court at a high level confirmed that this is what happened and those people were deliberately murdered by those three defendants.”

The three men convicted were former Russian intelligence agents Igor Girkin and Sergey Dubinskiy, and Leonid Kharchenko, a Ukrainian separatist leader.

The three were all found to have helped to arrange the transport into Ukraine of the Russian military BUK missile system that was used to shoot down the plane, though they were not the ones that physically pulled the trigger.

They are fugitives and believed to be in Russia. Top Russian politician Andrei Klishas has told Tass news agency that Moscow would not be extraditing Girkin and Dubinskiy.

A fourth former suspect, Russian Oleg Pulatov, was acquitted on all charges.

The incident in 2014 left the plane’s wreckage and victims’ remains scattered across cornfields. The area at the time was the scene of fighting between pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainian forces, the precursor of this year’s conflict.

Russia invaded Ukraine in February and claims to have annexed the Donetsk province where the plane was shot down.

Paul Guard, whose parents Roger and Jill Guard, from Toowoomba, died in the crash, said Russian President Vladimir Mr Putin shared “a lot” of the blame.

“It’s quite clear that Russia was heavily involved right from the start of this conflict in 2014,” he told the ABC.

“And the evidence in the trial has shown that the missile launcher came from Russia.

“So, clearly a lot of the blame has to be put at the foot of the Russian regime.”

He said he did not hate those responsible.

“Hate is not a useful emotion, but we need to find a way to solve this conflict,” Guard said.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the court had delivered justice and truth for victims.

She called on Russia to surrender the convicted men so they may be sentenced for their “heinous crime”.

Acting Prime Minister Richard Marles said it was a day of mixed emotions for the families, noting there was slim chance Russia would accept the ruling and hand the convicted men over.

“So there’s a sense that there is unfinished business here,” he said.

The judgment included a 16 million euro ($A25 million) damages award to victims that will be paid by the Dutch state if it is not paid by the convicted men.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy hailed the first sentences handed down over MH17 as an “important decision” by the court in The Hague.

“But it is necessary that those who ordered it also end up in the dock because the feeling of impunity leads to new crimes,” he wrote on Twitter. “We have to dispel this illusion.

Punishment for all Russian atrocities – both then and now – will be inevitable.”

Russia’s foreign ministry said the court had been under unprecedented pressure from Dutch politicians, prosecutors and the media to impose a politically motivated outcome.

“The trial in the Netherlands has every chance of becoming one of the most scandalous in the history of legal proceedings,” it said in a statement.

Moscow has repeatedly denied responsibility for the downing of the jet. In 2014 it also denied any presence in Ukraine.

“There is no reasonable doubt” that MH17 was shot down by a Russian missile system, Steenhuis said in his findings.

Eyewitness testimony and photographs introduced into evidence tracked the missile systems’ movements in and back out of Ukraine to Russia.

Phone call intercepts that formed a key part of the evidence against the men suggested they believed they were targeting a Ukrainian fighter jet.

Steenhuis said that, while that counted for something in terms of lessening the severity of their criminal responsibility, they had still had a murderous intent and the consequences of their actions were huge.

Of the suspects, only Pulatov had pleaded not guilty via lawyers he hired to represent him.

The others were tried in absentia and none attended the trial.

Local News Matters
Advertisement

We strive to deliver the best local independent coverage of the issues that matter to Queenslanders.

Copyright © 2024 InQueensland.
All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy