
The PACE adopted a resolution that MH17 over the Donbass was shot down by the Russian “BUK”
On June 23, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) recognized by a resolution that the Malaysian Boeing 777 flight MH17 in 2014 was shot down by a Russian missile. This is stated in the PACE statement. “Based on the evidence provided to its rapporteur by the Ukrainian and Dutch authorities, PACE considers the “most convincing scenario” that flight MH17 was shot down over Ukraine in 2014 by a Buk missile provided to military units controlled by the Russian Federation,” the statement said. Assembly. In addition, the Assembly stated that it was shocked by the “disinformation” spread by the Russian authorities regarding the downing of this aircraft. “Instead of providing reliable information to the competent investigating authorities, the Russian authorities are spreading disinformation, including consistent conflicting versions of events designed to create confusion,” they stressed. Yes, according to open source intelligence published in numerous reports , the Russian authorities even went so far as to “submit manipulative radar, satellite and other data to hide the truth.” PACE clarified that they were also studying versions that a Ukrainian SU 25 or MiG 29 fighter shot down flight MH17 or that a Ukrainian Buk missile fired from Kyiv-controlled territory was to blame. But they were “thoroughly refuted”. The Assembly once again called on Russia to “cooperate in good faith with the investigations, including providing proper satellite and radar data on the damage, and formally apologize to the families of the victims of MH 17 for the pain and suffering, caused by disinformation”. The last court session on the downing of the Malaysian Airlines flight, shot down in the sky over the Donbass in July 2014, ended in the Netherlands the day before. In July 2014, Malaysia Airlines Boeing-777 flying MH17 Amsterdam-Kuala Lumpur was shot down in the sky over Donbas. 298 people died. The investigation into the crash was conducted by the International Investigation Team, which included representatives of law enforcement agencies from Ukraine, the Netherlands, Belgium, Australia and Malaysia.Background