Malaysian
media is not marching in lock-step with western corporate media. They
want some answers.
Malaysia wants the ‘missing’ Ukrainian ATC tapes
KUALA LUMPUR: UKRAINE has denied that its State Security Service (SBU) had seized the air-to-ground transmission tapes between its air traffic controllers and Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 on the day the jetliner was shot down.
8
August, 2014
Its
ambassador to Malaysia Ihor Humennyi, in an exclusive interview with
the New
Straits Times,
said that reports alleging that the SBU had seized the recordings had
not been independently verified or confirmed by Kiev.
“There
is no proof or any evidence that the tapes were confiscated by the
SBU.
“I
only read this in the newspapers.”
Almost
immediately after the shootdown, several news agencies, including the
British Broadcasting Corporation, carried reports saying that
Ukraine’s SBU security service had confiscated recordings of
conversations between Ukrainian air traffic control officers and the
crew of the doomed airliner.
If
indeed the SBU had not seized the tapes, then where are the
air-to-ground communications tapes between MH17 and the ATC?
When
asked this, Humennyi said he did not have the answers.
Asked
if the tapes had been handed over to the investigators, Humennyi
said: “We don’t have any information that it had not been given
to the investigation team or that it was not received by the (team of
international) investigators.
Humennyi
said that if a formal request was made by Malaysia or the
international investigation team, Ukraine would extend its
cooperation. At one point, Humennyi seemed to question the
significance of the ATC tapes, saying that “it is just the same as
the flight data and cockpit voice recorders”.
Aviation
experts, however, point to the recordings as being another crucial
layer of evidence in piecing together the events leading up to the
point of missile impact with the airliner and the massive explosive
decompression and airframe break-up that followed as the Boeing
777-200 plummeted 33,000 feet to the ground, killing all 298
passengers on board.
Equally
puzzling is the international investigation team’s apparent snail’s
pace at requesting for the tapes from Ukrainian ATC.
Three
weeks into the tragedy and the Ukrainians have yet to receive any
formal request for the tapes.
Yesterday,
when asked, Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail said Malaysia
would make a formal request for the ATC recordings.
However,
he did not commit to a definite timeline.
On
suggestions that MH17 was brought down by an air-to-air missile fired
from an Sukhoi Su-25 Frogfoot and finished off with cannon fire from
the fighter’s internally-mounted Gsh-301 30mm cannon, Humennyi said
there’s a rational explanation.
“The
bulletholes these theorists said came from the fighter could have
come from any 30mm weapon used by the rebels.
“They
could have come from their armoured combat vehicles after the MH17
hit the ground.”
Humennyi
said that the 20km by 20km area of the crash site was safe.
“The
area around the crash site is completely safe as of now.”
Humennyi’s
statement contradicted the reports coming in from the Royal Malaysia
Police detachment on the ground in eastern Ukraine.
Inspector-General
of Police Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar said yesterday that the police
team, together with the Dutch and Australian experts had to
exfiltrate their forward operating base in Solidar yesterday due to
the deteriorating security situation there.
Khalid
said the team would move out in stages before midnight, local time.
Humennyi
said the pro-Russian rebels had broken the ceasefire agreement
earlier when they refused to allow the Organisation for Security and
Cooperation in Europe observers to continue investigating the
wreckage after they entered the crash zone.
“The
crash area was under the control of the separatists.
“They
were the ones who did not allow the investigators to resume their
work.
“These
rebels are saying we are shooting at them but who are the ones really
doing the shooting?
“It
is the actions of these rebels that do not allow us to resume our
investigations as they have gone against the agreement,” he said
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