WATCH: The bodies another 74 people who died when Malaysia Airlines MH17 was shot down over Ukraine arrived in the Netherlands , where forensic experts are working to identify the victims. Shirlee Engel reports from Amsterdam.
SYDNEY, Australia – Australia is close to finalizing a deal with Ukraine to send police and a small number of troops to secure the Malaysian plane crash site as part of a multinational team, the Australian prime minister said Friday.
Australia has 90 federal police officers in Europe ready to be deployed to the site in eastern Ukraine where Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was downed last week, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said. Some of the officers could be armed, and would be accompanied by members of Australia’s defence force, he said.
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Armed pro-Russian separatists control the area and have hampered investigators’ attempts to access the site.
Abbott stressed that the team, which would include countries that lost citizens in the disaster, would not be going in as part of a military mission.
“This is a humanitarian mission … with a clear and simple objective: to bring them home,” Abbott told reporters in Canberra, the nation’s capital. “Others can engage in the politics of eastern Europe. All we want to do is to claim our dead and to bring them home.”
All 298 people aboard the plane were killed when it was shot down on July 17, likely by a missile from territory held by pro-Russian rebels. Thirty-seven Australian citizens and residents were on board.
The urgency to secure the area grew after three Australian officials travelled to the crash site on Thursday and found more wreckage and human remains, Abbott said.
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“With these remains exposed to the ravages of heat and animals and to the continuing possibility of human interference, it’s more important than ever that the site be properly secured,” Abbott said. “Our objective is the remains can be recovered, that the investigation can go ahead and that justice can be done.”
Another 100 Australian police officers will be deployed to Europe in the next 24 hours, Abbott said.
The international police team would be tasked with ensuring a thorough search of the site so all remains are recovered and sent to the Netherlands for identification. The mission would be complete within a few weeks of arriving, Abbott said.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop presented an Australia-sponsored resolution to the U.N. Security Council that passed unanimously on Monday demanding that rebels co-operate with an independent investigation and allow all remaining bodies to be recovered.
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