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Monitors Reach Flight 17 Crash Site in Ukraine After Days of Delays Monitors Reach Flight 17 Crash Site in Ukraine After Days of Delays
(about 2 hours later)
KIEV, Ukraine — International monitors finally reached the crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in eastern Ukraine on Thursday, after being blocked for days by fighting in the area between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian separatists. SHAKHTYORSK, Ukraine — International monitors finally reached the crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in eastern Ukraine on Thursday, after being blocked for days by fighting in the area between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian separatists.
Officials from the Ukrainian government said it had temporarily suspended offensive operations against the rebels to allow the team of monitors to reach the site safely. Officials in the Ukrainian government said they had temporarily suspended offensive operations against the rebels to allow the monitors to reach the site safely. Commanders at Ukrainian military positions near the site confirmed that they had been ordered to halt their advance.
Michael Bociurkiw, a spokesman for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe who was with the team, said by telephone that they had traveled successfully through checkpoints in both government-controlled and rebel-held territory without encountering serious fighting. Even so, columns of rising smoke were seen and the sounds of explosions were heard near the site. In Shakhtyorsk, a mining town about 10 miles south of the site, gunshots and explosions were heard through the afternoon, though it was unclear who was firing.
At one point, however, explosions could be heard in the direction of Donetsk, Mr. Bociurkiw said. And a CNN television crew at the crash site broadcast images of a column of smoke rising nearby. Michael Bociurkiw, a spokesman for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe who was with the team at the crash site, said by telephone that they had traveled successfully through checkpoints in both government-controlled and rebel-held territory without encountering serious fighting.
At one rebel checkpoint on the approach road to the site, near the village of Rozsypnoe, The Associated Press reported that a separatist militiaman allowed the monitors to pass but fired a shot in the air to keep accompanying reporters from proceeding any farther. He said there was still fighting in the village, the agency reported. Mr. Bociurkiw said the two Dutch, two Australian, and eight O.S.C.E. experts who reached the site limited their work on Thursday to initial reconnaissance, preparing the way for later search and recovery work by a larger team of about 60 police officers and forensic experts waiting in Donetsk, the provincial capital.
Mr. Bociurkiw said the two Dutch, two Australian, and eight O.S.C.E. experts who reached the site limited their work on Thursday to initial reconnaissance, preparing the way for later search and recovery work by a larger team waiting in Donetsk, the provincial capital.
He said the reconnaissance team determined that the crash site had remained largely intact and unchanged since the plane, carrying 298 people, fell to the ground on July 17. Though local emergency workers collected many of the victims’ bodies for shipment to a forensic laboratory in the Netherlands last week, Mr. Bociurkiw said the team observed human remains still at the site on Thursday.He said the reconnaissance team determined that the crash site had remained largely intact and unchanged since the plane, carrying 298 people, fell to the ground on July 17. Though local emergency workers collected many of the victims’ bodies for shipment to a forensic laboratory in the Netherlands last week, Mr. Bociurkiw said the team observed human remains still at the site on Thursday.
Mr. Bociurkiw said the monitors’ success in reaching the site, after four failed attempts, was attributable to “negotiating with all the stakeholders,” meaning both the Ukrainian government and the rebels who have controlled the site since the crash.Mr. Bociurkiw said the monitors’ success in reaching the site, after four failed attempts, was attributable to “negotiating with all the stakeholders,” meaning both the Ukrainian government and the rebels who have controlled the site since the crash.
He said at 5 p.m. Thursday that the team was leaving the crash site for the day to travel back to Donetsk, about 40 miles to the west, on a circuitous, four-hour route. The team’s journey to the site from Donetsk, abut 40 miles away, followed a circuitous route and took about four hours, Mr. Bociurkiw said. Volodymyr Groysman, a deputy prime minister of Ukraine, told reporters in Kiev that Russian and Ukrainian envoys had agreed at talks in Minsk, Belarus, to keep the route open for the monitors to use.
Vladimir Antyufeyev, a rebel political leader, told journalists that the separatists were mainly responsible for the visit’s success. “We have risked our people so that the O.S.C.E. mission was able to do its job,” said Mr. Antyufeyev, the acting prime minister for the separatist government in Donetsk, according to the Russian news agency Interfax. “We ensured their safety. They went to the scene, and already returned back, under our security detail.” The Ukrainian government and the rebels have each accused the other of continuing to fight in the area despite promises and international calls for a cease-fire. The Ukrainian government said earlier this week that it intended to take control of the area, but by surrounding the crash site rather than in a direct fight over it.
Donetsk, the nearest sizable city to the crash site, is the main remaining rebel stronghold in eastern Ukraine. Roads between Donetsk and the Russian border that pass near the crash site are conduits for rebel fighters and munitions, the government in Kiev has said, and the Ukrainian military has been trying to isolate the rebels by retaking them.
At one rebel checkpoint within the crash area, near the village of Rozsypnoe, The Associated Press reported that a separatist militiaman allowed the monitors to pass but fired a shot in the air to keep accompanying reporters from proceeding any farther. He said there was still fighting in the village, the agency reported. Reporters accompanying the group said explosions from nearby shelling could be heard.
The Russian government aviation agency said on Thursday that it had sent its own team of experts to Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, in hopes of reaching the crash site and examining the wreckage. Russia has denied allegations by Ukraine and Western governments that it supplied missiles to the rebels that were used to shoot down the plane, and has claimed that photographs and other evidence offered to support those allegations were fabrications. Moscow has asserted that the Ukrainian military was responsible for the disaster.The Russian government aviation agency said on Thursday that it had sent its own team of experts to Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, in hopes of reaching the crash site and examining the wreckage. Russia has denied allegations by Ukraine and Western governments that it supplied missiles to the rebels that were used to shoot down the plane, and has claimed that photographs and other evidence offered to support those allegations were fabrications. Moscow has asserted that the Ukrainian military was responsible for the disaster.
The pro-Russian rebel leaders will send representatives to Minsk, Belarus, on Friday to take part in talks with Ukraine, Russia and the O.S.C.E., news agencies reported. Interfax quoted an official of involved in arranging the talks in Minsk, whom it did not name, saying that the talks would probably focus narrowly on two issues, security at the crash site and an exchange of captives. Vladimir Antyufeyev, the acting prime minister of the Donetsk People’s Republic, as the main separatist group in eastern Ukraine is known, said in an interview that a representative of the group would take part in the talks in Minsk on Friday, discussing security at the crash site and other issues with envoys from Ukraine, Russia and the O.S.C.E. Mr. Antyufeyev said he expected political support from Russia at the talks, pressing Ukraine to halt the shelling of civilian areas by its army and allied militias.
Moscow kept up its economic pressure on Ukraine on Thursday by adding fruit juice to the growing list of Ukrainian agricultural products that have been banned from Russia.
In Kiev, Ukraine’s deeply fractured legislature managed to head off a dispute with international creditors who have promised to bail out the country with $17.5 billion in loans, by approving budget amendments and tax measures that the creditors had demanded.In Kiev, Ukraine’s deeply fractured legislature managed to head off a dispute with international creditors who have promised to bail out the country with $17.5 billion in loans, by approving budget amendments and tax measures that the creditors had demanded.
The prime minister, Arseniy P. Yatsenyuk, who had staked his position on the legislation, submitted his resignation last week after Parliament voted against adopting a similar bill. His tactic succeeded on Thursday when the legislature voted 109 to 16 against accepting his resignation. The prime minister, Arseniy P. Yatsenyuk, had staked his position on the legislation, submitted his resignation last week after Parliament voted against adopting a similar bill. His tactic succeeded on Thursday when the legislature voted 109 to 16 against accepting his resignation.
“There are two pieces of news today,” Mr. Yatsenyuk told lawmakers afterward. “The first is that Argentina has defaulted. The second is that Ukraine has not defaulted, and never will.”“There are two pieces of news today,” Mr. Yatsenyuk told lawmakers afterward. “The first is that Argentina has defaulted. The second is that Ukraine has not defaulted, and never will.”
The legislators also released funds for the military and for repairs to damaged infrastructure in the country, and imposed a 1.5 percent war tax on all incomes. And they ratified agreements with Australia and the Netherlands allowing those countries to send about 950 “armed personnel” to secure the Flight 17 crash site.The legislators also released funds for the military and for repairs to damaged infrastructure in the country, and imposed a 1.5 percent war tax on all incomes. And they ratified agreements with Australia and the Netherlands allowing those countries to send about 950 “armed personnel” to secure the Flight 17 crash site.