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Flight MH17: UN approves resolution demanding access to crash site

WATCH: UN representatives from US, UK and Australia express their shock and disgust over the handling of the crash scene and the US pointed its finger at Russia for not doing more to prevent the tragedy

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The U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution Monday demanding international access to the site of the plane downed over eastern Ukraine and an end to military activities around the area, following intense pressure on a reluctant Russia to support the measure.

WATCH: Breakthrough in access to Flight MH17 crash scene

The resolution calls for a “full, thorough and independent international investigation” into the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 carrying 298 people in Hrabove. It calls for pro-Russia separatists to allow access to the site of the crash. And it demands that armed groups who control the crash site do not disturb debris, belongings or victims’ remains.

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All 15 council members voted in favour of the Australia-proposed measure, which was co-sponsored by nine other countries that lost citizens in the crash.

WATCH: Malaysia’s Prime Minister says the leader of the pro-Russian rebels has agreed to hand over both black boxes from Flight MH 17 to investigators who are in Ukraine

READ MORE: Obama demands investigators be allowed access to crash site

The foreign ministers of Australia and the Netherlands, along with the U.S. ambassador and other diplomats, challenged Russia to use its influence with the rebels to comply with the resolution.

“I hope that Russia will now feel its responsibility, act on its responsibility. If it doesn’t, it’s going to have an increasingly isolated position in the international world,” said Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans, who travelled to New York for the Security Council meeting.

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The vote came after a weekend of negotiations to overcome Russian objections to the text, including a phone conversation between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbot.


WATCH: Train departs carrying bodies of crash victims

Russia had pushed for the resolution to state that the International Civil Aviation Organization – rather than Ukrainian authorities – take the lead in the investigation. The final resolution fell short of that demand, but in an effort to assuage veto-wielding Russia, it included wording changes that played up the participation of the ICAO, a U.N. agency.

Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said he was satisfied that the ICAO would have a prominent role in the investigation, and welcomed the announcement that the Netherlands would also take a lead role.

“We could not simply allow the Security Council to endorse a Ukrainian-led investigation because we have no trust in their intention to conduct a truly objective investigation,” Churkin told reporters after the vote.

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In her speech to the council, U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power rebuked Russia, saying a Security Council resolution would not have been necessary had Russia pushed the rebels from the start to allow unimpeded access to the site.

“Russia’s silence since Thursday sent a message to the illegal armed groups it supports: We have your backs,” Power said. “We are not naive: if Russia is not part of the solution, it will continue to be part of the problem.”

Churkin shot back at Power during his speech, saying “there is no need to turn the discussion of a tragedy into a farce.”

Addressing the council, Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the resolution is an “unambiguous response from the international community to an utterly deplorable act.” Later, she also accused Russia of not doing enough to help secure the crash site for investigators.

“Russia had influence over the separatists. And Russia could have enforced an appropriate crash site and created the conditions for this investigation to be carried out immediately,” Bishop told reporters.

Australia lost 37 citizens and residents in the crash, while the Netherlands lost 193.

Canada expedites sanctions against Russia

The Harper government says it is planning to slap more people and entities with sanctions over Russia’s continuing military actions against Ukraine.

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The move comes as Canada and the rest of the world reacts with shock to the downing of flight MH17 over eastern Ukraine.

WATCH: John Baird slams Russia’s handling of the crash scene and Vladimir Putin’s response

Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird says Russian-backed rebels in the region need to withdraw from the area and allow an international team of forensic experts to investigate the crash of the Malaysian airliner.

WATCH: During a UN Security Council meeting, Canada called on Vladimir Putin to use his influence to end the conflict in the Ukraine which led to the tragic downing of Flight MH17

The United States has presented what it called “powerful” evidence that Ukraine’s rebels shot down the plane with a Russian
surface-to-air missile and training. Other governments have stopped short of accusing Russia of actually causing the crash.

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WATCH: President Obama calls for full and fair investigation into MH17 downing

READ MORE: Dutch angered over treatment of bodies of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17

Russian officials have blamed Ukraine’s government for creating the situation and atmosphere in which the plane was downed.

Churkin dismissed the criticism that Russia had allowed rebels to tamper with the crash site as part of a larger “effort to discredit the protest movement in the east” of Ukraine.

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Ukrainian Ambassador Yuriy Sergeyev also addressed the council, welcoming the resolution and calling for the rebel groups to be recognized by the world as terrorist organizations.

“Russian citizens are among the leadership of the terrorist groups,” he said, calling on Russia to withdraw forces from the Ukraine border and “stop threatening peace and security in our country, the region and the world.”

Associated Press writers Ron DePasquale in New York and Matthew Pennington in Washington contributed to this report.

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