Saturday 19 July 2014

MH17: Rebels agree to security zone at Ukraine crash site

GRABOVE: Ukraine and pro-Russian insurgents agreed today to set up a security zone around the crash site of a Malaysian jet whose downing in the rebel-held east has drawn global condemnation of the Kremlin.
Outraged world leaders have demanded Russia’s immediate cooperation in a prompt and independent probe into the shooting down on Thursday of flight MH17 with 298 people on board.
A team of nearly 30 monitors from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) were to try and gain access to the grisly crash site on Saturday after meeting resistance from armed rebels the day before.
But they face a massive challenge in gathering evidence that could definitively determine why the flight ended prematurely in a lawless region where Ukrainian forces have thus far been unable to exert control.
More investigators arrived overnight from the Netherlands – home to 192 of the victims – and Malaysia amid calls for unfettered access to the scene as Kiev accused the rebels of trying to destroy crash evidence “with Russian support.”
Rebels backed up by strong diplomatic support from the kremlin remain in control of the area and have shown few signs of being ready to cooperate with an investigation that could potentially blame them for attacking the jet.
And an agreement to set up a buffer zone came only after two days of intense international mediation and has yet to be fully put to the test.
The sunflower fields of the war-ravaged former Soviet nation remained littered with dismembered remains of scarred bodies and personal effects such as slippers of 298 people whose lives were cut short as they flew from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur.
US President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron agreed by phone that “all countries should engage to ensure that pro-Russian separatists grant investigators secure and unhindered access to the crash site,” Downing Street said.
The head of the Ukrainian Security Service announced on Saturday that OSCE-mediated talks “concluded with an agreement to set up a 20-kilometre (12-mile) security zone so that Ukraine could fulfil the most important thing – identify the bodies (and) hand them over to relatives.”
But the pro-Kiev administration of the Donetsk province where the doomed flight ended so abruptly alleged that militias in control of the area “had stolen the bodies of 36 victims (and) loaded them onto truck as if they were sacks.”
There was no independent confirmation of the claim or explanation from the local authorities as to why the rebels would remove bodies from the scene.
Ukrainian rescue workers said they had recovered 186 bodies thus far.
Fighting also raged on across the eastern rustbelt – a Russia-speaking region of seven million people who largely view the more nationalistic west of the splintered country with mistrust.
Ukrainian forces reported taking full control of the main airport of the rebel stronghold of Lugansk – like Donetsk capital of its own “People’s Republic” – and launching all-out offensives against two nearby towns.
Government troops said they had also entered Donetsk airport for the first time since it was seized at the end of May in a bloody raid that saw militias lose more than 40 fighters – most of them Russian nationals.
Obama and major world leaders now agree that the Malaysia Airlines jet was blown out of the sky at 33,000 feet (10,000 metres) by a sophisticated surface-to-air missile fired from rebel-controlled territory.
Kiev has gone a step further by accusing militias of using a Russian-supplied Buk system to down the jet after confusing it with a Ukrainian military transporter.
Ukraine has released recordings of what it said was an intercepted call between an insurgent commander and a Russian intelligence officer as they realised they had shot down a passenger jet.
But Russian President Vladimir Putin blamed the tragedy on Kiev’s three-month military campaign against the fighters and called for a probe that could explain why the jet was flying over a combat zone.
The plane’s downing came less than a day after the United States unleashed punishing sanctions against some of Russia’s most important energy and military firms – most of them with links to Putin – and urged more hesitant European leaders to follow suit.
“We want Russia to take the path that would result in peace in Ukraine, but so far, at least, Russia has failed to take that path,” Obama said on Friday in a special address on Ukraine.
“I think that this certainly will be a wake-up call for Europe and the world that there are consequences to an escalation of the conflict in eastern Ukraine.”
The European Union – many of its member states dependent on Russian gas – took the far less punitive step on Friday of curbing some future investments in Russia and leaving the option open for broader sanctions.
“If the rebels are responsible, this episode will likely speed the broadening of financial, energy, and possibly other sector sanctions against Russia,” analysts at the Eurasia Group said.
US Department of Defense spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said “it strains credulity that (the missile) can be used by separatists without some measure of Russian support and assistance.”
Putin rejects all charges of providing either funding or military support to the insurgents in order to punish the new pro-Western leaders in Kiev for the February ouster of a Kremlin-backed president.
Rebel commanders have also denied being in possession of any functioning Buk systems – a claim that contradicts an earlier announcement of them having seized some from Ukrainian troops.
Kiev has released footage purportedly showing militias trying to covertly send one Buk unit back across the Russian border.
Ukrainian Defence Minister Valeriy Geletey said the rebels had probably used a Buk system that Russia had seized from Ukraine during its March annexation of the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea.
**source by yahoo news

Friday 18 July 2014

Questions bout : MH17 Crash in Ukraine


The whole Nation were in grief again. Another one of the nation's airplanes has gone down and with it, hundreds of civilian lives. Another tragic case of Malaysia Airlines, MH17 .

Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was due to touch down in Kuala Lumpur at 6.10am today from Amsterdam, but it never made it home, crashing instead near the strife-torn border of Ukraine and Russia.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak described it aptly when he addressed the media at the 4am, saying this was “a tragic day in an already tragic year”, following the disappearance of Beijing-bound MH370 five months ago.
Malaysia still could not verify independently the reason behind the plane’s crash, but here is what we know so far:
1. What caused the crash?
Ukraine has accused pro-Russian separatist rebels of shooting down the plane using a vehicle-mounted Russian-built “Buk” ground-to-air missile.
Meanwhile, pro-Russian rebels claimed it was the Ukrainians who brought MH17 down, which was denied by Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko.
Igor Sutyagin, a Russian military specialist at the London-based Royal United Services Institute was quoted by UK’s Guardian newspaper as saying that either Russians or Russian-supported groups in eastern Ukraine were responsible for the incident.
US intelligence analysts “strongly believe” a surface-to-air missile downed the plane and are reviewing data to determine whether the weapon was launched by pro-Moscow separatists in Ukraine, Russian troops across the border or Ukrainian government forces, said an anonymous US official to AFP.
The Buk, dubbed “Grizzly” by Nato, was developed by the USSR in the 1970s to shoot down cruise and other missiles. It has since gone through many redesigns and upgrades, and been widely exported. Ukraine forces also use Buk.
2. When did this happen?
MH17 departed Amsterdam at around 6.15pm Malaysian time.
MAS was notified by the Ukrainian air traffic control that it lost contact with it four hours later.
By 11.30pm, MAS officially announced that it has lost contact with MH17; Interfax earlier reported that the plane was shot down.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak addressed the media at around 4.30 am, two hours before the flight was originally scheduled to arrive.
Malaysia will now be sending a rescue and medical team to Kiev to assist the crash.
3. Where did MH17 go down?
MH17 went down in Ukraine, near the village of Grabovo, 40km from the Russian border.
Reuters journalists reported seeing burning and charred wreckage bearing the red-and-blue colours of Malaysia normally emblazoned on MAS planes and dozens of bodies strewn in fields nearby.
The crash site is near the city of Donetsk, an alleged stronghold of pro-Russian rebels.
News agency Interfax claimed the plane disappeared when it was flying 10km above ground, a typical cruising altitude for airliners.
Additionally, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) insisted that the flight did not fly over a restricted airspace.
4. Who are the victims?
A total of 283 passengers and 15 crew were on the crashed plane.
The nationalities of the passengers cannot yet be confirmed as the manifest has not been released yet.
However according to the European head of MAS, among the nationalities on board were 154 Dutch, 27 Australians, 23 Malaysians, 11 Indonesians, six Britons, four Germans, four Belgians, three from the Philippines and one Canadian.
All the crew members were Malaysians.
5. How does this affect the aviation industry?
Following the incident, commercial flights are avoiding Ukrainian airspace, and rerouted to avoid the area where MH17 crashed.
This includes another MAS flight, MH21, from Paris to Kuala Lumpur, which skirted the crash area.
American airlines have also voluntarily agreed to avoid airspace near the Russian-Ukrainian border, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
Meanwhile, the United Kingdom’s department of transport has ordered “flights already airborne” to bypass south-eastern regions of the country.
The European Union air traffic control regulator ― Eurocontrol ― has closed the airspace over eastern Ukraine and planning routes that avoid Ukraine altogether.
6. Why was MH17 shot down?
It is possible that MH17 was shot down by mistake.
A social media site attributed to a top Ukrainian rebel commander said the insurgents shot down an army transporter at the same area as the crash.
The comments by the top military commander of the self-proclaimed "Donetsk People's Republic" suggest the separatists believe they had shot down a large Ukrainian army transport plane.
An anonymous source also told Interfax that the missiles might have been aimed at the plane of Russian president Vladimir Putin, as he was using a similar route.
Several Ukrainian planes and helicopters have been shot down in four months of fighting in the area , and the rebels had shot down three Ukrainian transport planes this week alone.


















Deepest condolence to all family members and friends of 298 passengers and cabin crew on board.
AL-FATIHAH.


**credit to Yahoo news and google