Wednesday is the tenth anniversary of Malaysia Airlines being shot down over eastern by rebel forces with .
Ceremonies in Europe later on Wednesday will center around Vijfhuizen in the Netherlands, near Amsterdam’s Schipol Airport, where the plane took off — the site of the monument to the 283 passengers and 15 crew killed.
Of the victims, 193 were from the Netherlands.
Australia mourns in Canberra ceremony
In Canberra, Australia — far ahead of the Netherlands in terms of timezones — a memorial took place at Parliament House’s Great Hall on Wednesday.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong and former Prime Minister Tony Abbott, in office when the commercial airliner was shot down, were among the attendees.
Twenty-nine of the dead were Australian citizens and another nine were residents.
“Ten years ago, we woke to news as incomprehensible now as it was then: 298 lives taken; 298 voyages ended, yet forever incomplete; 38 who called Australia home, one of the worst Australian peacetime losses of life,” Wong said at the ceremony.
“You have lost so much. But you are not alone in your loss. We are with you,” Wong told the friends and relatives of the deceased. “And your grief steels us in the fight for justice, as it has steeled Australia since that terrible day.”
PM Albanese and opposition leader Dutton call for accountability from Russia
Current Prime Minister Antony Albanese shared an image of himself laying a wreath at a Canberra memorial.
“Australia remains steadfast in our commitment to seeking truth, justice and accountability from those responsible for this horrific act of violence,” Albanese said.
Opposition Liberal Party leader Peter Hutton issued a lengthy statement that even more clearly called out Russia and even President Vladimir Putin.
He repeatedly quoted snippets of an international investigation into the shooting, including one saying that the Russian decision to provide Ukrainian rebels with the type of firepower used to shoot down the plane “.”
The investigators concluded that fighters had intentionally targeted the plane, but that they had not done so in the knowledge that it was a commercial airliner. and .
EU calls on Russia ‘to accept its responsibility in this tragedy’
The European Union, like Wong at the ceremony in Canberra, referred to UN Resolution 2166, saying it reiterated its “full support for all efforts to establish truth, justice and accountability” in the case.
“The European Union reiterates its call on the Russian Federation to accept its responsibility in this tragedy and to cooperate fully in serving justice,” it said in a statement issued ahead of the anniversary.
Australia has also sent Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus to Vijfhuizen near Amsterdam for the European ceremonies. He spoke to ABC News beforehand.
“One of the main messages in the speech that I’m going to give today is a message of sorrow, but equally a message that Australia is determined, in the memory of those who died, to continue to bring to justice all those responsible,” Dreyfus told ABC. “It’s a message of sorrow, but also a message of determination — that we’re not going to let this go.”
When, where and how was MH17 shot down?
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 took off from Amsterdam’s Schipol Airport just after midday local time on July 17, 2014, bound for Kuala Lumpur.
Just over three hours later, its flight data recorder stopped functioning. It was at a standard cruising altitude and was situated roughly above the Hrabove village in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk oblast at the time.
A Russian-made Buk surface-to-air missile detonated just above and to the left of the pilot’s cabin, instantly destroying the cockpit and killing the three people inside it, and leading almost immediately to an explosive decompression in mid-air.
It was one of four commercial aircraft in the area at the time of the crash.
The incident soon led to several airlines changing their standard flight paths to avoid the area.
msh/lo (AFP, AP, dpa)
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