Dutch experts headed to MH17 crash site: official

A team of 30 Dutch forensic experts headed on Sunday to the crash site

Update: 2014-07-27 14:48 GMT
Foreign governments whose citizens died have complained the site is still not secured. (Photo: AP)
The Hague: A team of 30 Dutch forensic experts headed on Sunday to the crash site of flight MH17 in rebel-controlled east Ukraine, Dutch officials said, despite intensifying fighting in the area.
  
The team was able to travel following an agreement the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe made with the pro-Russian separatists, the Justice Ministry said in a statement.
 
Read:
3 plane crashes that shocked the world in a fortnight
 
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A Malaysia Airlines crew member places a flower next to candles
forming the letters MH17 after a multi-faith prayers for the victims of
the downed Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 at Malaysia Airlines Academy
in Kelana Jaya, near Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Friday. (Photo: AP)
  
Read: Malaysia, Dutch PMs to discuss access to plane crash site
 
Rebels prepare train carriage with MH17 luggage
 
(Photo: AP)
 
Rebel leaders in east Ukraine said on Sunday that a train carriage filled with the personal belongings of the victims of downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 had been handed over to Dutch officials.
  
"The carriage has been sealed and is ready to be sent out of the territory of the Donetsk People's Republic," said Sergei Kavtaradze, a member of the self-declared rebel authority's security council.
  
The train carriage contains "personal belongings and luggage of the disaster", he said in a statement, adding that it had been formally signed over to the Dutch on the ground in rebel territory on Saturday.
 
Read: Human remains still at MH17 crash site: Australia PM
  
A couple is backdropped by pictures of victims of the MH17 air crash
during a memorial concert in Kharkiv, Ukraine, Thursday.
(Photo: AP)
 
The Dutch justice ministry on Sunday said a team of 30 forensic experts was headed to the crash site, following an agreement the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe made with rebels.
  
Kavtaradze was not immediately available to give further details.
  
The Netherlands is leading an investigation of the July 17 incident and are planning to deploy gendarmes and police to the scene of the crash near Donetsk, along with Australian officers.
  
Russia has also opened its own inquiry.
  
Out of the 298 victims of the crash, 193 were Dutch citizens and 28 were Australian.
  
The rebels have rejected accusations they shot down the plane with a missile from Russia.
   
Read: Woman wears make-up found at MH17 crash site
 
Australia to send 'non-threatening' force to MH17 site
 
Ukrainians tape pictures of victims of the MH17 air crash on a wall
before a memorial concert in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Thursday. (Photo: AP)
 
Australia said Sunday "a number" of armed personnel will enter the MH17 crash site next week, but stressed they would be a "non-threatening force" not accompanied by military troops.
  
Australia and the Netherlands have been readying their forces ahead of a possible deployment to rebel-held territory in eastern Ukraine to secure the MH17 crash site and recover victims' remains and aircraft wreckage.
  
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said some of the Australian team at the site would be armed to protect the crash investigators, but did not specify how many.
  
"The main focus is on having police investigators, those who are expert in body identification and those who are expert in investigations, Dutch and Australian at this stage," Bishop told broadcaster Channel Ten, speaking from Amsterdam.
  
"All we want to do is secure the site so that we can inspect it thoroughly and bring back any remains."
  
Read: Obama, Abbott, Rutte, demand full access to MH17 crash site
 
A woman lights a candle near flowers and candles placed in honour
of 3 citizens, a mother,17 year old daughter and 13 year old son who
were among the victims of flight MH17 in Delft, Netherlands, on
Wednesday.
(Photo: AP)
 
Her country's special envoy to eastern Ukraine, retired Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, said Sunday Australian Defence Force (ADF) troops would not be part of the police-led team that searches the debris zone.
  
Australia is sending 190 Australian Federal Police to the Netherlands, along with a small number of ADF troops, including a medical team, to participate in a planned Dutch-led operation to secure the crash site.
  
The rebels accused of shooting down MH17 with a missile from Russia have signalled they are only open to allowing a small group of Australian and Dutch officers in.
 
 
  
Malaysian forensic experts attend a memorial concert for the victims
of the MH17 air crash victims in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Thursday.
(Photo: AP)
 
"Military personnel have been involved in some of the activity but on this one, it's a police-led mission and I think that's the right answer and I think it's going to be very important to posture a non-aggressive, non-threatening force so that nobody will interfere with it," Houston told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  
"If we go in white vehicles, which is what we're going to do with the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, we're clearly going to be in the right sort of posture."
  
Houston said the "humanitarian operation" would start next week, and that "we will have a combination of armed personnel and unarmed personnel if that's the way the government decides to go".
  
He added that reconnaissance visits by some Australians to the crash site were "very successful" and the separatists they encountered were "professional and cooperative". 
  
All 298 people onboard the Malaysia Airlines jet, including 28 Australian nationals and nine permanent residents, were killed in the crash.
 
Read: Ukraine rebel commander acknowledges fighters had BUK missile
 
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