Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 vigil in Ottawa turns to protest - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 07:41 PM | Calgary | -11.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 vigil in Ottawa turns to protest

A solemn vigil for victims of downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 turned to protest in Ottawa Saturday morning as mourners marched with black flags from the Dutch embassy to the Russian embassy.

Mourners march from Dutch to Russian embassy with black flags to join protest

Protest at Russian Embassy

10 years ago
Duration 2:08
Dozens gathered outside Russian Embassy in Ottawa after downing of Malaysia Airlines flight.

A solemn vigilfor victims of downed MalaysiaAirlines FlightMH17 turned to protestin OttawaSaturday morning as mourners marched with blackflags from theDutch embassyto the Russian embassy.

Nearly 200 of the 298 passengers on theKualaLumpur-boundflight that departedfrom Amsterdam were from the Netherlands. Everyone on Thursday's flight is presumed dead.
Mourners gathered outside the Dutch embassy for the victims of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17. (CBC)

American intelligence suggeststhe plane was hit by asurface-to-air missile launched fromeastern Ukraine an area controlled by Russian-backed separatists.

TheUkrainiangovernmentand pro-Russia separatists have both denied being responsible for shooting down the plane.

In Ottawa, protesters pinned the blame on Russian President Vladimir Putin for his continued support of separatists in Ukraine. About 30 people gathered outside the Dutch embassy on Albert Street Saturday morning, and later marched to Russian embassy on Charlotte Street where a protest was already underway.

"This is a global issue that deserves the world's attention and help," said Inna Platonova, a Ukrainian-Canadian who helped organize the protest at the Russian embassy."Anybody could have been on that plane us, our children. We are grieving together with the families that lost their loved ones. We are crying together with them. We are heartbroken."

Meanwhile, investigators tasked with analyzing the wreckage have the additional challenge of doing so in a war zone. The crash site is about40 kilometres from the Russian border.