Dutch embassy to hand Russia’s explanations over MH17 to Foreign Ministry
As the Dutch Foreign Ministry reported earlier, Russia’s statements regarding the criminal investigation of the MH17 crash in Donbass where the reason
MOSCOW, October 3. /TASS/. Dutch ambassador to Russia Regina Jones-Bos will hand over to her country’s Foreign Ministry the content of the conversation she had at the Russian Foreign Ministry, where she had been invited over the loss of Malaysia’s Flight MH17 over Donbass in July 2014.
"The Dutch Foreign Ministry is to be notified of the content of the conversation first," Jones-Bos said after visiting the Russian Foreign Ministry without elaborating. Her visit to the Russian Foreign Ministry lasted for about thirty minutes.
Earlier, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said the Dutch ambassador would be handed arguments to the effect it is utterly unacceptable to have a situation in which crucial objective information presented by Russia is ignored, which eventually disrupts Russian experts’ cooperation with the investigation and discredits the efforts being exerted for the sake of establishing the true picture of the tragedy and bringing those responsible to justice in compliance with UN Security Council’s Resolution 2166.
The Russian ambassador to the Netherlands was summoned to the Dutch Foreign Ministry on September 30. As the Dutch Foreign Ministry said, Russia’s statements regarding the criminal investigation of the MH17 disaster over Ukraine in July 2014 where the reason.
Earlier, on September 28, the Joint Investigation Team came up with preliminary findings of the criminal investigation into the Malaysian airliner’s crash in Donbass. JIT investigators claimed that the plane was downed by a missile launched with the air defense system Buk from the area of the village of Pervomaiskoye, south of Snezhnoye, held by anti-Kiev militias on the day of the tragedy.
A passenger Boeing-777 jet of the Malaysian Airlines (Flight MH17 from Amsterdam to Kuala-Lumpur) was lost over the east of the Donetsk Region on July 17, 2014. All 283 passengers and 15 crew - citizens of ten countries - died in the disaster.