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Ruslands udenrigsminister Sergey Lavrov siger at der er mange spørgsmål hvad angår undersøgelsen af det nedskudte MH17 Malaysia Airlines fly over østukraine, og tilføjer at den[undersøgelsen] "ikke er uafhængig, ikke er fuldstændig og ikke er oprigtig international."

Ruslands topdiplomat talte til den Singapore-baserede Channel News Asia og nævnte at en af hovedstridspunkterne som Moskva har, er at eksperterne ikke er blevet givet fuld adgang til den information som er blevet brugt i undersøgelsen, som er blevet ført af Joint Investigation Team (JIT) - bestående af Australien, Belgien, Holland,Ukraine og Malaysia.

"Repræsentanter af Russian Civil Aviation Organization deltager i disse procedurer, men informationen som vi modtager gennem denne repræsentation er ikke fuldstændig. Vi er blevet givet mindre information end dem som startede undersøgelsen, " sagde Lavrov ved et besøg til den malaysiske hovedstad, Kuala Lumpur.

Lavrov sagde katagorisk at Rusland ønsker at "sandheden bliver etableret og at de skyldige bliver bragt for retten." Dog, indrømmede den russiske udenrigsminister at han er ved at blive frustreret idet undersøgelsen "ikke var uafhængig, ikke var fuldstændig og ikke var oprigtig international."



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"All our attempts to push the investigation, to make it transparent, to provide information... all our attempts to get answers to the questions which we formulated through our professional civil aviation agency, all these were just stonewalled," he said.

Malaysia wants the truth

Russia is not the only country that has had limited access to investigation. Despite owning the airline, which was involved in the tragedy, Malaysia was only admitted to the JIT in December 2014, some six months after MH17 was downed over east Ukraine, a decision that Russia's top diplomat found staggering.

However, unlike some other countries in the investigation that "seem to be quite prejudiced" and would prefer to "politicize the situation," Lavrov is sure that Malaysia has the best interests of the victims of the tragedy at heart.

"We believe that Malaysia is the most sincere country in wanting to establish the truth. It has experienced two disasters with its airliners and I don't see any political motivation in what Malaysia is trying to do."

"There are those in Europe and the West who would like to use this tragedy to also achieve political purposes," Lavrov said, alluding to those who had pointed the finger at Russia immediately after the tragedy occurred on July 17, 2014.

Lavrov slams international tribunal plans

Moscow has come in for criticism from the West for refusing to back a motion calling for a criminal trial for those responsible for the tragedy. Lavrov hit back, saying that rather than this being a planned international inquiry, it would have in fact been made up of just a handful of nations.

"The proposal itself was very peculiar. It was proposed in the draft statute to establish the tribunal based mostly on Ukrainian law and for the judges and prosecutors in the tribunal to be appointed by the Secretary-General without consulting the Security Council and that the judges should have experience in exercising Ukrainian and Malaysian law," he said.

Lavrov was also curious why an international tribunal had never been used before, when passenger aircraft had accidently been shot down, with Russia's foreign minister noting that on each occasion, there was "always some special way out."

"In 1988, when the United States shot down an Iranian civil airliner, when Ukraine shot down a Russian airliner in 2001, the Lockerbie case... All these were considered criminal offences. The Security Council never created any tribunal to investigate these incidents."

Lavrov is in Kuala Lumpur for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) forum. On the sidelines of the summit, he has already met with a number of foreign minister's, including a discussion his Malaysian counterpart, Anifah Aman.

"The two sides exchanged views on the prospects of boosting cooperation in the political, trade, economic, military, technical and humanitarian areas," the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement, as cited by TASS. "The two sides paid particular attention to the course of the investigation into the crash of the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17."

Earlier in the day, Lavrov explained Russia's position regarding the Security Council veto, which has been met with anger in the West, saying, "The creation of the tribunal might be used as a pretext to hide the inefficiency of the investigation which is being conducted by the Netherlands," Lavrov told reporters.

Agreeing to disagree

Lavrov also held his second meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry in the space of three days. The pair discussed the threat that Islamic State poses, but were unable to come up with a mutual plan on how to deal with the terrorist organization.

"We all agree that Islamic State is the common threat, common evil. We agree that we need to join efforts to fight this phenomenon as soon and as effectively as possible," Lavrov said.

"For now we don't have a joint approach on how specifically we can do it given the stand-off between various players on the ground, including armed units of the Syrian opposition."