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World knows Russia harboring MH17 killers — Australia

Agence France-Presse
World knows Russia harboring MH17 killers � Australia
In this file photo taken on Nov. 11, 2014, Dutch investigators accompanied by pro-Russian armed rebels arrive near parts of the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 at the crash site near the Grabove village in eastern Ukraine, hoping to recover debris from the Malaysia Airlines plane which crashed in July, killing 298 people, in remote rebel-held territory east of Donetsk. A Dutch court gives its verdict on November 17, 2022 in the trial of four men over the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 above Ukraine in 2014, as tensions soar over Russia's invasion eight years later. All 298 passengers and crew were killed when the Boeing 777 flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur was hit over separatist-held eastern Ukraine by what investigators say was a missile supplied by Moscow.
AFP / Menahem Kahana

SYDNEY, Australia —  Australia's foreign minister on Friday urged Russia to surrender three men found guilty of shooting down Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 and called out President Vladimir Putin for "harboring murderers."

A Dutch court on Thursday sentenced three men to life imprisonment over the 2014 downing of the Malaysia Airlines flight over Ukraine.

Russians Igor Girkin and Sergei Dubinsky and Ukrainian Leonid Kharchenko were found guilty in absentia of shooting down the Boeing 777 with a Russian-supplied missile, killing all 298 passengers on board. 

Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the verdict confirmed the "Russian Federation has responsibility". 

"We call on Russia to surrender those convicted so they may face the court's sentence for their heinous crimes," she told reporters. 

"No amount of avoidance, obfuscating, or disinformation from the Russian Federation can avoid that fact." 

Wong said Russia's refusal to hand over the men was ultimately a damning indictment on Putin's character. 

"We would say to Russia the world knows that you're harbouring murderers and that says something about you Mr Putin," she later told national broadcaster ABC. 

Moscow has shrugged off the verdict as politically motivated, while Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky -- battling a full-scale Russian invasion after years of low-level fighting in the east -- has praised it as "important". 

The trial represents the end of a long search for justice for the victims of the disaster, who came from 10 countries, including 196 Dutch, 43 Malaysians and 38 Australian residents.

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VLADIMIR PUTIN

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