Good luck! Russia wants regular, transparent reports on MH17 crash probe amid silence from the West
Moscow wants the investigation into the
crash
of a Malaysian Boeing 777 to be as most transparent as possible, and insists on regular provision if prove reports in accordance with the UN Security Council resolution, a diplomatic source told RIA Novosti.
"Investigation into the reasons of the catastrophe should be carried out
under international control, should be all-encompassing and transparent for the wide international audience and mass media
," the source said. "We will keep pressing for it, demanding the implementation of the UNSC resolution 2166 which stipulates monthly reports about the course of the investigation."
Resolution 2166 adopted by the UN Security Council in July calls for a thorough and impartial investigation into the MH17 tragedy and requires the secretary-general to provide the Security Council with investigation progress reports.
The source stressed that
the majority of Western media "seem to have been ordered to avoid the investigation issue for about two weeks."
"US official representatives who rushed to accuse Russia and Donetsk self-defense forces in the first hours following the tragedy, also maintain silence. America's allies, particularly the British and the Australian, who were also among the first accusers, stick to the same policy. The international community has not yet seen the promised "incontestable evidence."
The explanation is that the truth could be inconvenient to Washington, London and Canberra
," the source told RIA Novosti.
The source added that Kiev's official position is also telling.
"As the curtain of allegations is clearing, the specialists have more and more questions over the actions of the Ukrainian authorities and military toward the Boeing.
Kiev still has not made public the recordings of the talks between air traffic control and the crew
, which would allow to understand why the plane was in the combat area," the diplomatic source said.
Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down over eastern Ukraine on July 17 en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur,
killing
all 298 people on board, including 193 Dutch nationals, 43 Malaysians and 27 Australians.
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