Dutch PM: MH17 bodies expected today, IDs could take months

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THE HAGUE: The first bodies from the MH17 crash in Ukraine will be flown today to the Netherlands, where their identification could take months, Prime Minister Mark Rutte said.

“Tomorrow (today), the first plane (with bodies) will leave for Eindhoven” in the southern Netherlands, Rutte told journalists after the bodies arrived in Ukraine’s Kharkiv town from rebel-held territory.

“Preparations will be made in Kharkiv so that identification can be done in the Netherlands as well as possible,” Rutte said.

“As soon as a victim is identified, first and foremost the family will be informed and no one else. That can take weeks or months.”

Of the 298 people killed when Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 was brought down over Ukraine, allegedly by a missile fired by pro-Russia rebels, 193 are Dutch, and the Netherlands is in charge of their identification.

Rutte said that Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) monitors in Ukraine had indicated around 200 bodies were aboard the train, while unconfirmed reports said it contained 282 bodies.

“As soon as some victims are ready to be transported, the plane will leave,” Rutte said, confirming that all the bodies would be brought to the Netherlands and then flown on to their respective countries.

The Dutch defence ministry said that a Dutch C-130 Hercules and an Australian C-17 transport plane would create an “airbridge” between Kharkiv and Eindhoven to bring the bodies back.

Australia, which lost 37 citizens in the crash, is also sending forensics experts and other investigators to Eindhoven and Ukraine, the defence ministry said in a statement. — AFP