Malaysia Airlines MH17: Vladimir Putin Slams Politicians For Using Disaster To Pursue 'Selfish' Political Goals

Aussie PM Doesn't Hold Back At Putin As Fury Mounts At Russia
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George Osborne has said further sanctions will be considered against Russia if it fails to co-operate in efforts to secure the MH17 crash site, as pictures emerged showing rescue workers wandering around carrying a black box flight recorder.

Amid growing international fury at Vladimir Putin, the Chancellor said Russia "holds the key" to access to the "truly horrific" scene in eastern Ukraine, which is controlled by pro-Moscow separatists.

"Of course any sanctions will have an economic impact, and we are prepared to undertake further sanctions.

Story continues after slideshow...

Victims of Air Malaysia Flight MH17 in Ukraine
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Richard Mayne pictured in April 2014 in Nepal.
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Mo, Evie and Otis Maslin were on board MH17 along with their grandfather Nick Norris.
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Ben Pocock who has been confirmed as one of the passengers.
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Newcastle United fan John Alder, who was known as ‘The Undertaker’, is believed to have been making his way to New Zealand to watch the Magpies on their pre-season tour (credit:Paul Blacklock)
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Newcastle United football fan Liam Sweeney who was believed to have been on his way to watch this beloved team's pre-season tour
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Robert Ayley
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Stephen Anderson
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Mo, Evie and Otis Maslin were on board MH17 along with their grandfather Nick Norris.
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Elaine Teoh
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German woman Fatima Dyczynski, 24, was one of four Germans on #MH17.
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Emiel Mahler
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Roger Guard
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Jill Guard
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Sister Philomene Tiernan
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Nick Norris
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Joep Lange
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Glenn Thomas from Blackpool who has been killed in Malaysian air disaster flight MH17 over the Ukraine.
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Elaine Teoh and her long-time boyfriend Emiel Mahler, who both died on flight MH17.
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Albert and Maree Rizk who are believed to be among the Australians killed in the crash.
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Gerry and Mary Menke were killed on the flight
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Martine de Schutter
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Pim de Kuijer
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Helena Sidelik, who died aboard MH17
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Azrina Binti Yakob was also on board the Boeing 777
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Angeline Premila was reportedly on the Malaysian Airline flight MH17
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Flight steward Sanjid Singh,
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Liliane Derden
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Pilot Eugene Choo Jin Leong was flying Air Malaysia MH17
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Frankie and Liam Davison.
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Regis Crolla posted an image Instagram, with the comment "AMS --> Kuala Lumpur --> Bali."
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Cor Pan (left) and his partner Neeltje Tol
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Chief stewardess Dora Shahila Binti Kassim
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Shazana Salleh who was also reportedly a flight attendant on board the flight
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Yuli Hastini, John Paulissen and their two children Arjuna and Sri who were on board the Air Malaysia flight
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Wayne Sujana is believed to be missing
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Ninik Yuriani was reportedly on a trip back to Central Java
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Dutch passengers Astrid Hornikx and Bart Lambregts
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24-year-old Ontario medical student Andrei Anghel was among the 298 people killed when a Malaysia Airlines plane was downed over Ukraine
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Karlijn Keijzer was a 25-year-old doctoral student in the chemistry department at the Indiana University College of Arts and Sciences.
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Hendry Se in this handout photograph released on July 18, 2014 by the family of Hendry Se, an Indonesian passenger on the crashed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, shows Henrdy at her graduation.
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Howard and Susan Horder
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Pim de Kuijer
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Quinn Lucas Schansman was reportedly on his way to a family vacation in Malaysia.
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Emma Bell
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Wan Amran Wan Husin
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Gary Slok and his mother Petra posed for the photo aboard Flight MH17 hours before the plane was allegedly shot down and crashed.
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Sydney-based kindergarten teacher Gabriele Lauschet (right) has been identified as NSW's sixth victim on flight MH17
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Dutch language teacher Dafne Nieveen was killed while flying home to Perth
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Victor Oreshkin
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Arjen Ryder and wife Yvonne from Albany, Queensland, were travelling together
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Marie Rizk was travelling with her husband on board MH17
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Recently retired couple Wayne and Theresa Baker
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Edel Mahady was returning to Perth for the start of the school term at Good Shepherd Catholic Primary School, Kelmscott
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Shaliza Dewal and her Dutch husband Hans Van Den Hende were travelling from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur with their three children, Piers, 15, Marnix, 12, and daughter Margaux, 8
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Michael and Carol Clancy
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Gary Lee ran a Chinese restaurant while his wife Mona who was a schoolteacher
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A photograph of Indonesian man Wayan Sujana of Bali, believed to be missing on Air Malaysia flight MH17, is fixed to the ticketing desk of Air Malaysia at Schiphol Airport on July 18, 2014 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
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Dutchman Itamar Avnon was on a trip to Israel for a wedding and stopped over in Amsterdam to visit friends
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Melbourne-based IT security consultant Marco Grippeling
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Jack O'Brien of Sydney, was 25.
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Elsemiek de Borst
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Bryce Fredriksz and his girlfriend, Daisy Oehlers, were killed in the Malaysia Airlines 17 flight disaster.
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Angeline Premila Rajandran
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Jennifer van der Leij
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Andrew Hoare with wife Estella and sons Jasper and Friso
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This June 26, 2014 family photo released by Ross Campbell, shows Sue Campbell, left, Ross Campbell, Albert Rizk, second from right, and Maree Rizk, right, while they are on holiday in Florence, Italy. Albert and Maree Rizk died in the downed Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. (AP Photo/Ross Campbell) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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In this Monday, July 21, 2014 photo, candles are lit next to a portrait of Irene Gunawan, one of three Filipinos who died in the Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 downed over in eastern Ukraine, on an improvised altar prior to a novena prayer at her clan residence at Pagbilao township, Quezon province south of Manila, Philippines. Irene, her two children and her Indonesian husband Budy, were killed along with 294 others onboard the flight. (AP Photo/Jim Gomez) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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In this undated photo released by the Calehr family, Samira Calehr, left, poses with her son Shaka Panduwinata. Shaka Panduwinata and his brother Miguel Panduwinata, were killed aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, which was shot down over eastern Ukraine. (AP Photo/The Calehr family) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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In this undated photo released by the Calehr family, Miguel Panduwinata, left, Mika Panduwinata, Samira Calehr, second from right, and Shaka Panduwinata, right, pose for a photo. Shaka Panduwinata and his brother Miguel Panduwinata were killed aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, which was shot down over eastern Ukraine. (AP Photo/The Calehr family) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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In this July 2011 photo provided by Ron Peter Pabellon, Irene Gunawan poses with her son Darryl at a resort in her Philippine hometown of Pagbilao, Quezon province, while attending a family reunion with her husband Budy, who is of Indonesian descent, and daughter Sherryl. The Gunawan family, which was based in the Netherlands, was heading to the Philippines for another reunion when their Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was believed to have been shot down over Ukraine. All 298 passengers and crew were killed. (AP Photo/Ron Peter Pabellon) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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This 2011 family reunion photo provided by the Pabellon family, shows Irene Gunawan, second from left in back row, her Indonesian husband Budy, right in front row, and their children Darryl, second from left in front row, and Sherryl, fifth from left, in back row, with their relatives in Pagbilao township, Quezon province, south of Manila, Philippines. Irene, her two children and her Indonesian husband Budy were killed along with 294 others onboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 which crashed over eastern Ukraine. (AP Photo/Pabellon family) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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In this undated photo released by the Calehr family, Miguel Panduwinata poses for a photo. Miguel and his brother Shaka Panduwinata were killed aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, which was shot down over eastern Ukraine. (AP Photo/The Calehr family) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Cameron Dalziel was one of the victims of MH17 pictured with wife Reine
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Shuba Jaya, and her Dutch filmmaker-husband Paul Goes with their daughter, Kaela, were among the 298 people onboard Malaysia Airlines flight MH17

"But think of the economic hit... of allowing international borders to be ignored, of allowing airliners to be shot down. That is a much greater economic hit for Britain. We are not prepared to just allow that to happen," the Chancellor said.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott claimed allowing those accused of shooting down MH17 to be in charge of the crash site is like "leaving criminals in control of the crime scene".

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Putin said others were using the disaster to achieve 'selfish political goals'

Putin meanwhile claimed politicians should not use the shooting down of MH17 and the deaths of 298 people aboard to pursue "selfish, narrow" political goals, has said.

The Russian president has come under intense international pressure to call the separatists, who he is accused of backing and arming, to heel.

Earlier this morning, he said the plane would never have been shot down, if fighting in the region between the separatists and the Ukrainian government had not resumed at the end of June.

“We must do everything to provide security for the international experts on the site of the tragedy," he told Russian network Russia Today - which has itself been accused of biased, pro-Russian reporting in its coverage of the disaster.

"In the meantime, nobody should and has no right to use this tragedy to achieve their narrowly selfish political goals."

Meanwhile, the US set out the evidence it claimed it had for Russian separatists being behind the atrocity.

Secretary of State John Kerry said it was "pretty clear" that an SA-11 missile system had been transferred by Russia into the hands of the separatists.

Rescue workers under the control of Russian-backed rebels have removed most of the 298 bodies of those killed on the flight, which families fear could be as bargaining tools by those accused of shooting the plane down.

The separatists have been accused of obstructing independent inspectors trying to access it, hampering an official investigation.

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The refrigerated railway carriages that reportedly contain bodies of MH17 victims

They have placed almost 200 bodies from the downed Boeing 777 into refrigerated train carriages in rebel-held town of Torez, nine miles from the crash site, but around 100 reportedly remain among the wreckage.

"It looks more like a garden clean up than a forensic investigation," Tony Abbott said during a press conference.

"Given that 38 Australians are among the dead, it’s vital we get a properly secure site and a proper investigation.

"In order to bring them home we first have to get them out. We want to retrieve the bodies and investigate the site and we want to punish the guilty."

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Evidence: A rescue worker carries one of the black boxes from the scene of the crash

There have been reports of looting, and the families of some of the 10 Britons who died fear the rebels may hold on to their relatives as bargaining tools.

Hugo Hoare, whose brother Andrew died on the plane, told the Daily Telegraph he was concerned over whether the rebels would take care of them.

He said he hoped that diplomatic pressure would bring about a decent resolution, saying: "I just hope whatever they are doing is humane and their intention is just to release them at the appropriate time.

"The first thing I thought was what if they are going to use them as a bargaining chip?"

Barry Sweeney, who lost his 28-year-old son Liam, said it was "a concern" that the separatists may use the dead to their advantage, and said they should have been repatriated straight away.

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Tony Abbott said 'we want to punish the guilty'

Jordan Withers, nephew of former BBC producer and World Health Organisation media officer Glenn Thomas, who also died on MH17, called for the bodies to be released to allow the families closure.

He told the Telegraph: "It's becoming more apparent from what we have seen or heard that there is growing concern about decomposing bodies at the scene and about looters.

"That is a real concern of ours. My uncle had personal belongings with him on the plane that his partner and us would like to get back."

Prime Minister David Cameron is due to make a statement to MPs later spelling out what measures he believes should be taken following the apparent shooting downing of the plane by rebels.

In what was described by Downing Street as a "frank" conversation last night, the Prime Minister told Putin his support for insurgents in eastern Ukraine had "contributed to an appalling tragedy" and the delay in experts being able to investigate was "indefensible".

Further pressure will be put on Russia at the United Nations today and a meeting of EU foreign ministers tomorrow is expected to result in a more punitive sanctions regime, with Mr Putin's "crony group" possible targets.

French arms sales and German dependence on Russian fossil fuels have been seen as possible barriers to tougher measures, but Britain will argue that the whole union must share the burden.

A No 10 source said the UK wanted additional names to be added to the list of Russians subject to travel bans and asset freezes under the existing criteria for EU sanctions.

These could include "entities" - firms or organisations - as well as individuals involved in supporting efforts to destabilise Ukraine.

But there will also be an effort to extend the scope of the sanctions, to allow those who are influencing or supporting the "Russian regime" to be targeted for sanctions, meaning oligarchs within Putin's inner circle could be named.

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Barry Sweeney lost his son Liam in the crash

Barry Sweeney was on MH17 along with fellow Newcastle United fan John Alder, said he has now stopped watching the news because it was so upsetting.

Speaking to ITV's Good Morning Britain today, the 52-year-old father of seven, who cares for his terminally-ill wife Lesley, said he just hoped all 298 victims were taken home.

"Without going into politics because I think the Government have to sort that out, I just want them basically to bring the 298 people who need to be brought home for this to close," he said.

"I have seen a little bit of the news, I try to stop watching it only because it is upsetting, especially when you see body bags but I'm hoping Liam is in one of those because I don't want him to be lying there somewhere where there's nobody there to give him a good cuddle, you know."

Mr Sweeney said the family were struggling to comprehend what had happened to Liam and that nobody ever had a bad word to say against him.

"For me personally I've never stopped, I've been getting up... I don't think I've had any time to think," he said.

"My wife - who was Liam's step mum - and my ex-wife who I spoke to yesterday, they're in bits, they just can't comprehend what's happened. I think I'm getting through it because I can talk to people, as long as I'm talking, I'm fine; when I stop, the tears come.

"Liam was one of those lads where nobody had a bad word to say against him but I never heard him have a bad word to say about anybody else he just got on with things.

"He was a good lad, he was there if you wanted him to be there. If it had anything to do with Newcastle it might have to come second, but that was Liam."