THE HAGUE – The Netherlands and Australia said on Friday they held the Russian state responsible in part for the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in July 2014 that killed all 298 aboard, and will seek compensation.
MH17 was shot down over territory held by pro-Russian separatist forces in eastern Ukraine in 2014 as it flew from Amsterdam en route to Kuala Lumpur. Victims were from 10 nations and included 193 Dutch and 28 Australian citizens.
Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Blok said a possible next step would be presenting the case to an international court, though first the Netherlands and Australia would seek a more substantial reaction from Moscow.
“It has now been indisputably proven that there is a direct link between the rocket that hit MH17 and the Russian army,” Blok told a news conference in The Hague.
“We call on Russia to accept its responsibility and cooperate fully with the process to establish the truth and achieve justice for the victims of Flight MH17,” he said.
Russia has always denied any involvement, and said on Thursday none of its missile launchers had ever entered Ukraine – despite photographic evidence presented by prosecutors.
Blok said he had spoken by telephone on Friday with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov. He described Lavrov as “standoffish” and said Lavrov had repeated that Russia was not responsible.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call on Friday that Russia had not been a fully fledged participant in the Dutch investigation and could not therefore trust its findings. When asked if the Kremlin denied allegations of Russian involvement, he said: “Absolutely.”
The Dutch cabinet made its announcement a day after an interim report by prosecutors investigating the plane’s destruction said the Buk missile that shot it down came from a launcher in Russia’s 53rd Anti-Aircraft Brigade.
Prosecutors stopped short of saying who actually fired the fatal shot.
“Russia has not cooperated at all (with the criminal investigation),” Blok said.
He said the Netherlands and Australia would seek financial damages “but also compensation in form of cooperation.”
Blok said that attempts to hold Russia responsible for the plane’s downing under international law would be a different, parallel process from the ongoing investigation by prosecutors seeking to establish individual criminal responsibility.