Eight years ago, Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 (MH17) was shot down from the sky by a Russian surface-to-air missile while flying over eastern Ukraine.
Contact with the Boeing 777-200ER, travelling from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, was lost as it was about 50 kilometres from the Ukraine-Russian border. Its wreckage was found near the small village of Hrabove in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast, 40 kilometres from Russia.
Everyone on board the plane died: There were 283 passengers and 15 crew, totalling 298 people.
Among those were at least 20 family groups and 80 passengers under the age of 18.
As well as 38 Australian citizens and permanent residents, there was one New Zealander, 193 Dutch, 43 Malaysians and 12 Indonesians aboard MH17, plus 10 British passengers. Other passengers were from Germany, Belgium, the Philippines and Canada.
And behind those large and shocking statistics are people. Real people, families and children.
Watch: The long pursuit of justice for victims of MH17. Story continues below.
On that MH17 flight, the cabin crew were known as the “flying mothers” by their Malaysia Airlines colleagues due to the route being popular with working parents.
Top Comments
Putin is a real gangster. He is the primary culprit. He wants the russian "lost territories" from the ussr days back.
Yes, and I suspect we will start to see some action on that front. They've been skirting around the edges for awhile now. But with America's isolationist policies, Brexit and the EU looking shaky, I think things will probably start to happen. Last year they lined the Lithuanian border with Nuclear capable weapons, what next?