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MH17 investigators find fragments 'probably from Russian-made missile' at Ukraine crash site

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A pro-Russian separatist rebel stands guard at the crash site of MH17 in eastern Ukraine in a photo taken in July, 2014. Photo: Reuters

Investigators probing the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 in eastern Ukraine said they had found fragments “probably” from a Russian-made surface-to-air missile at the crash site.

 The passenger jet was shot down over Ukraine on July 17 last year, during heavy fighting between government forces and pro-Russian separatists. All 298 people onboard were killed.

 Dutch public prosecutor Fred Westerbeke said on Tuesday that international and Dutch investigators were examining seven “considerable fragments of some size... probably from a BUK missile system.”

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 A joint statement from prosecutors and the Dutch Safety Board (OVV) said the fragments were “secured during a previous recovery mission [at the crash site] in eastern Ukraine and are in possession of the criminal investigation team and the Dutch Safety Board”.

 But investigators said it was not yet clear whether the apparent missile pieces were related to the attack.

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 “It’s too early to say that the fragments we found were, for instance, from the BUK rocket that possibly shot down MH17,” Westerbeke told state broadcaster NOS.

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