Incidenty

The decision to send the SCK "beech" to Ukraine could take Putin personally - the investigation on MH17

There is reason to believe that the President of Russia is involved in the transfer in 2014 of the missile complex to the pro -Russian fighters "L/DNR", but it is impossible to hold it responsible because of immunity, a joint investigative group said. Russian President Vladimir Putin personally decided to send the Buk anti-aircraft missile complex to Ukraine, with the help of which pro-Russian militants shot down the Boeing 777 Malaysia Airlines airlines in July 2014.

This conclusion was reached by a joint investigative group (JIT), writes the Dutch edition of NL Times. "There are convincing signs that in Russia the President has decided to give" Beech "(fighters)," JIT said at a press conference. According to the newspaper, the investigative group reported that there is a specific information that indicates that the request of the militants at the Beech was transferred to Putin and that he agreed.

However, the President of the Russian Federation cannot be held accountable because it has immunity, stressed in JIT. According to the media, during the press conference, JIT representatives indicated that in telephone conversations, Russian officials say that the decision to supply military equipment to Ukraine remains with the President. The corresponding decision was postponed for a week because the one who "makes the decision . . . is now at a summit in France.

" At this time, on June 5 and 6, 2014, Putin participated in the celebration of the Allied Day during World War II in France. Relatives of MH17 victims are disappointed that the investigation did not find new suspects for judicial prosecution, said Pete Ploeg, head of the Stichhting Vliegramp MH17. He and other relatives were informed about the conclusions of the joint investigative group before the press conference.

We will remind, on July 17, 2014 in the Donbass the flight Malaysia Airlines from Schiphol to Kuala Lumpur was shot down. All 298 people on board were killed. Last November, the Court in the Hague condemned the former leader of the pro -Russian fighters Igor Girkin, his right hand Sergei Dubinsky and garrison commander Leonid Charchenko to a life imprisonment for participating in the MH17 flight. The fourth suspect Oleg Pulatov was justified.