Accessibility links

Breaking News
An activist stops a lorry near the village of Chongar, in the Kherson region adjacent to Crimea.
An activist stops a lorry near the village of Chongar, in the Kherson region adjacent to Crimea.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (ARCHIVE)

Follow all of the latest developments as they happen.

Final Summary For September 21

-- NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has called on Russia to withdraw heavy weapons from eastern Ukraine.

-- No trucks have passed through the administrative border from mainland Ukraine to Crimea overnight, according to Oleh Slobodyan, the spokesperson for Ukraine’s State Border Service.

-- Hundreds of pro-Kyiv activists from Crimea's Tatar community and other opposition activists are taking part in the blockade of roads from Ukraine to the Crimean peninsula to protest Russia's annexation of the region last year.

-- The German government has criticized Russia for not distancing itself from plans by Russian-backed separatists to hold local elections in eastern Ukraine without consulting Kyiv.

*NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Kyiv

09:00 17.7.2015

Good morning. Today is the first anniversary of the downing of MH17, a Malaysian airliner that crashed in eastern Ukraine killing all 298 on board. According to this item from our news desk, a new video obtained by an Australian media outlet seems to add more evidence to claims that pro-Russian separatists were responsible for the plane's destruction:

A damning new video obtained by Australian newspapers shows Ukrainian rebels sifting through the wreckage of MH17 and finding to their surprise that the aircraft was civilian rather than military.

The 17-minute video, published by Sydney's Daily Telegraph one year after the Malaysian Airlines plane was shot down over rebel-held territory in eastern Ukraine, appears to show the moment rebels realize they have shot down a passenger plane rather than a Ukrainian fighter jet.

The video, that seems to have been taken on mobile phones by the rebels themselves, appears to support initial evidence that the civilian airliner with 298 passangers on board was shot down mistakenly by rebels who believed they had destroyed a Ukrainian Sukhoi air force fighter jet.

News Corp., owner of the newspaper, said the video taken by the rebels was smuggled out of Donetsk just this week after months of efforts to obtain it.

The newspaper said that the video shows a rebel unit dispatched from Donetsk to the crash site to hunt for Ukrainian military pilots that the rebels believed had parachuted out after rebels shot their jet fighter down.

The newspaper said that in one frame a man wore a clearly visible identification tag from the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic around his neck.

The rebels, holding guns and dressed in army camouflage as they wandered around the still-smoldering wreckage, can be heard in the video talking about looking for the Ukrainian pilots and then expressing surprise and confusion as they discovered the aircraft and its passengers were civilian.

“It’s a civilian!” said the commander. And then, in a revealing admission: “They [headquarters] say the Sukhoi brought down the civilian plane and ours brought down the fighter."

Speaking in both Russian and Ukrainian, the rebels ask how this passenger plane was allowed to fly over Ukraine. An unidentified commander is heard receiving calls from rebel leaders trying to find out what is going on.

The rebels express surprise and dismay as they find dismembered bodies of civilians with luggage tags showing they were from Australia and Malaysia.

Despite their macabre discoveries, the rebels are seen rummaging through luggage and gathering phones, wallets and other items of value.

"It is sickening to watch, and 12 months on from the downing of MH17, it is deeply concerning that this footage has emerged now," said Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop on Australian TV.

"It is certainly consistent with the intelligence advice that we received 12 months ago, that Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 had been shot down by a surface-to-air missile," she said.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the images demonstrate that the downing was an atrocity and the rebels were "deliberately shooting out of the sky what they knew was a large aircraft."

Abbott said he had no doubt that the aircraft was shot down with a Russian-supplied surface-to-air missile.

“Rebels don’t get hold of this kind of weaponry by accident. I mean, this was obviously very sophisticated weaponry,” he told ABC TV.

“We are confident that it was weaponry that came across the border from Russia, fired, and then shortly thereafter, once it was realized what had happened, went back into Russia.”

Most of the plane's passengers were from the Netherlands, but it also was carrying 38 Australians and dozens of Malaysians. All passengers and crew were killed in the crash.

The plane was shot down during a bout of heavy fighting last year between Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian separatists.

Kyiv and the West have long maintained that the rebels shot the plane down using a Buk surface-to-air missile supplied by Russia. But Moscow denies involvement and instead accuses Ukraine's air force of shooting the plane down.

News Corp. said that local people around the crash site were instructed to say they saw the plane being shot down by a fighter jet.

A criminal probe by a joint investigation team consisting of Australian, Belgian, Dutch, Malaysian, and Ukrainian detectives is currently underway.

(dpa, AFP, the Australian, Sydney Daily Telegraph)

09:01 17.7.2015

09:02 17.7.2015

09:03 17.7.2015

09:03 17.7.2015

09:04 17.7.2015

09:06 17.7.2015

09:09 17.7.2015

10:13 17.7.2015

This just in from our news desk:

Australia has held a memorial service to mark the first anniversary of the MH17 air disaster over Ukraine, in which 298 people, including 38 Australians and residents, died.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott unveiled a plaque with the names of the Australian victims in the gardens of Parliament House in Canberra on July 17.

The plaque sits on top of soil taken from the area where the plane came down.

The Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 was flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur when it crashed in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region on July 17, 2014.

Investigators, led by the Dutch, believe evidence points to a Russian missile fired by Russian-backed rebels as the likely culprits. Russia and the separatists deny any responsibility.

Memorial ceremonies will also be held in Ukraine and the Netherlands on July 17.

(AP, the BBC, Sky News)

12:42 17.7.2015

Load more

XS
SM
MD
LG