Russian
investigators reveal identity of key witness in MH17 crash
The
Russian Investigative Committee has identified a key witness to the
MH17 crash in Ukraine’s Donetsk Region. He is Evgeny Agapov, an
aviation armaments mechanic in the Ukrainian Air Force.
The
man is currently under Russian state protection.
Screenshot from Russian Investigative
Committee video
Agapov, a Ukrainian citizen, was serving as a military mechanic in the first squadron of the Ukrainian Air Force’s tactical aviation brigade.
According
to Markin, the man “voluntarily
crossed the state border of the Russian Federation and expressed a
desire to cooperate with the Russian investigation.”
Agapov
has testified that on July 17, 2014, a Ukrainian Sukhoi Su-25 jet
aircraft piloted by one Captain Voloshin “set
out for a military task,” Markin
said.
The aircraft returned to the airfield with empty ammunition. To his colleagues, Voloshin said that the plane was "at the wrong time or in the wrong place,” said the Investigative Committee spokesman.
“Our
jets were flying regularly,” Agapov
said in his testimony. “When
one returned, the pilot, Captain Voloshin, got out of the
cockpit.” He
added that, as Captain Voloshin walked away with the other pilots,
Agapov heard him say: “That
was the wrong plane.”
“In
the evening we learned that a passenger Boeing was shot down that
day,” the
witness said.
He
said that on that day, July 17, the soldiers together with Agapov
were “servicing
another jet, attaching its payload.”
“Nearby
was Flight Control Officer Dyakin, Captain Voloshin and two other
pilots. Dyakin asked Voloshin: ‘What happened with the plane?’ He
said, ‘It
was in the wrong place at the wrong time.’”
On
Tuesday, Russian arms manufacturer Almaz-Altey announced the results
of its own probe into the MH17 tragedy. They say that the crash could
only have been caused by one of the missiles from BUK’s older line
of defense systems, the BUK-M1. These missiles are widely deployed by
a number of post-Soviet states, including Ukraine, but have been
replaced by a newer model in Russia.
“If
a surface-to-air missile system was used [to hit the plane], it could
only have been a 9M38M1 missile of the BUK-M1 system,” Almaz-Antey
said in a statement.
In
the meantime, Almaz-Antey’s experts said they had
not “theoretically” excluded
the possibility that the Boeing was hit by another type of weapon,
such as an air-to-air missile. They cautioned that that final
conclusions could only be drawn after all the necessary forensic
tests had been conducted by the official investigative commission.
The
Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, with 298 passengers on board, crashed
on July 17, 2014 in the Donetsk Region of eastern Ukraine. The Boeing
was en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, and the majority of its
victims were Dutch citizens.
Dutch
forensic experts are leading the investigation into the causes of the
tragedy. However, they have so far released only a preliminary
report, in which they said that the plane “broke
up in mid-air due to external damage.”
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