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Wednesday, 23 July 2014

MH17 PLANE CRASH: FIRST VICTIMS ARRIVE IN NETHERLANDS

Honour guards carry a coffin of one of the victims of Malaysia Airlines MH17 at Kharkiv airport (23 July 2014)
Flights carrying the remains of those on board MH17 have arrived in the Netherlands
Two planes carrying bodies from crashed flight MH17 have landed in the Netherlands where a day of mourning for the 298 victims has been declared.

Experts there will begin to identify the dead, most of whom were Dutch.
Pro-Russian rebels have been widely accused of shooting down the Malaysia Airlines plane on 17 July.
UK government sources say intelligence shows rebels deliberately tampered with evidence, moving bodies and placing parts from other planes in the debris.
As fighting continued in eastern Ukraine on Wednesday, officials in Kiev told the BBC that two aircraft, thought to be military jets, had been downed just 35km (20 miles) from the crash site.
The officials had no information on the cause of the crashes, or the fate of the pilots.
US intelligence officials had earlier released evidence to the media that they said showed the separatists' involvement in bringing down flight MH17.
Rebels have also been accused of exaggerating the number of bodies transported from the crash site to the town of Kharkiv on Tuesday.
They had claimed 282 bodies had been loaded on to a train, but experts said only 200 could be verified.


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