Dutch investigators accompanied by armed rebels arrived near
the MH17 crash site in eastern Ukraine Tuesday hoping to recover debris from
the doomed airliner amid fears all-out fighting could break out again.
Around a dozen experts arrived in a convoy of cars but were
not permitted to enter the zone where the Malaysia Airlines plane crashed in
July, killing 298 people, in remote rebel-held territory east of Donetsk.
The Dutch team hopes to begin work as soon as possible but
there are concerns that rebels could be gearing up for a fresh offensive
despite a shaky ceasefire signed in September but dogged by localised outbreaks
of fighting.
Five Ukrainian soldiers were killed and nine injured in the
east over the past 24 hours, military spokesman Vladyslav Seleznyov said.
There has been intense shelling around Donetsk in recent
days and an AFP journalist saw 28 trucks, six tanks and 14 howitzer artillery
systems and two armoured personnel carriers driving through rebel territory
around the city Monday.
“We hope that the removal of debris can start as soon as
possible but that depends on the situation on the ground,” Wim van der Wegen, a
spokesman for the Dutch Safety Board, told AFP.
Pieter-Jaap Aalbersberg, the head of the recovery mission,
told public television in the Netherlands that the team was “absolutely ready”
to start collecting debris.
Rebels cited by Russian news agencies said the team had
abandoned any effort to collect debris Tuesday as negotiations stumbled over a
protocol for the project.
The delay came as Russian President Vladimir Putin, facing a
fraught week of diplomacy with the West, discussed Ukraine with US President
Barack Obama and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott at the Asia Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Beijing.
Ukraine and the West accuse Russia of supplying the
pro-Kremlin separatists with the missile that shot down the plane, while Moscow
and the rebels have pointed the finger of blame at Kiev’s forces.
The talks with Obama came after US Vice President Joe Biden
warned Monday after a call with Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko that the
“costs to Russia will increase” if it continues to “wilfully violate” the terms
of a ceasefire signed in September.
“The unacceptability of a situation when experts cannot get
to the crash site has been noted,” the Kremlin said in a statement, after
Putin’s meeting with Abbott.
Putin has denied that rebels are hindering access to the
site, blaming Ukrainian forces for shelling the area.
Abbott “did not try” to follow through on a threat to
“shirtfront” Putin over MH17, which was carrying 38 citizens or residents of
Australia, a Kremlin spokesman said.
His country will host this week’s G20 summit in Brisbane
where more talks are likely.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Drop your comments