‘Moral duty’ to punish ‘murderers’ who downed MH17: Ukraine
KYIV - Agence France-Presse
People carry an Orthodox cross and icons walk to attend a memorial service at the crash site of the Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, near the village of Hrabove, eastern Ukraine, Friday, July 17, 2015. Residents of the Ukrainian village where the Malaysian airliner was shot down with 298 people aboard a year ago began a procession to the crash site on Friday, while the Australian prime minister remembered the “savagery” of the disaster by unveiling a plaque in Canberra that’s set in soil from the pl
President Petro Poroshenko called it a “moral duty” July 17 to punish the “murderers” who killed 298 people by downing Flight MH17 over rebel-held eastern Ukraine one year ago.“Our moral duty to honor the memory of the fallen ones is to ensure a fair punishment for those guilty in downing the aircraft. This crime represents a threat to the whole international community,” said Poroshenko.
“The murderers should know that the punishment is inevitable,” Poroshenko said in the English-language statement.
The Western-backed leader said the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 was shot out of the sky by a surface-to-air missile that could only have been supplied to the insurgents under direct orders from Russia’s most senior leaders.
“It would not have happened without participation, without a direct order from the highest political and military leadership of the neighboring state,” said Poroshenko. Russia denies supplying Ukraine’s eastern militias with the type of Buk missile system allegedly used in the attack.
It claims to have played no role in the 15-month conflict and has blamed the downing at various stages on either a Ukrainian-made Buk system fired by government soldiers or an air-to-air missile launched by Kiev’s air force.
Poroshenko on July 17 reaffirmed his support for the establishment of a United Nations criminal tribunal that could prosecute those responsible for downing the flight from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has called the idea “counterproductive. “
His official spokesman on July 16 refused to say whether Moscow would use its veto on the UN Security Council should a call to set up the tribunal come up for a vote.
But Poroshenko warned that his vow to find and punish the guilty were “not empty words.”
“Ukraine is ready to continue to provide all the support, information, necessary to bring those responsible to justice,” he said.