MH17

Malaysia mourns ******* of **** as crew is repatriated home

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia – Carried by soldiers and draped in the national flag, coffins carrying Malaysian ******* of Flight **** returned home Friday to a country still searching for those onboard another doomed *** and a government battling the political fallout of both tragedies.

The bodies and ashes of 20 ******* from the ***************** *** that was shot down over eastern ******* in July were given full military honours and a day of national ******** was declared, the first for civilians in the country’s five-decade history.

Many people in offices in the nation of 30 million observed a minute’s silence as the hearses were driven from the tarmac of Kuala Lumpur International Airport to private funerals. Some public trains in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, stopped operating.

All 298 people onboard **** when the *** was shot down over an area of ******* controlled by pro-****** separatists on a flight from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur. The ******* included 43 Malaysians and 195 Dutch nationals. An international ************* is ongoing, but no one has been arrested.

The return of the bodies also represented a political triumph for Prime Minister Najib Razak, whose already shaky popularity ratings were hit by his handling of the still unsolved disappearance of ***************** Flight 370 and its 239 passengers and crew in March.

“Today we mourn the loss of our people. Today, we begin to bring them home,” Najib said in a statement. “Our thoughts and our prayers are with the families and friends of those who lost their lives. Today we stand with you, united as one.”

Najib claimed personal credit for negotiating a deal with pro-Russian separatists for the return of all the bodies. Few details have been released over what the separatists were given in return, and some critics have said that the negotiations with people many regard as terrorists set a dangerous precedent.

“Everyone wants closure for the families, there is no question,” said Bridget Welsh, a research associate at the National Taiwan University. “But on the other hand, they (Najib’s advisers) saw this as an opportunity for him to look good. It was critical for the government to be seen as responsive and differentiate itself from the handling of *****.”

The ******* were carried aboard a specially chartered ***************** *** from Amsterdam, where they were taken from the ***** site. Three had already been cremated. The coffins were individually lowered from the plane and slowly carried by teams of eight soldiers to waiting hearses.

“They were ********** of ***, unfortunately, and the ***** community needs to work toward a solution to these conflicts,” said Abdul Mueiem, a ***************** pilot who attended the ceremony. “Everyone is feeling sad and depressed, but the important thing is that ***************** is one big family, and we are together with the nation.”

The repatriation was the first of the Malaysian passengers and crew on the flight. The government has said that the bodies of the remaining Malaysians would follow soon.

The country may never witness a similar homecoming for the ******* on board Flight 370. The plane went missing on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing and is believed to have crashed somewhere in the southern Indian Ocean.

After several surface and underwater searches have turned up nothing, a new underwater search is expected to begin in September and take up to a year to search 60,000 square kilometres (23,000 square miles) of the Indian Ocean seabed.

Assuming the plane is found, the depth of the ocean will make recovery of any bodies difficult. Relatives might also prefer the bodies to stay where they are.

 






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