A convoy of funeral hearses arrives at the Korporaal van Oudheusdenkazerne in Hilversum, The Netherlands. A Dutch Air Force C-130 Hercules plane and an Australian Royal Australian Air Force C17 transport plane brought back 74 more coffins containing remains of the victims of the Malaysia Airlines MH17 plane crash, from Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine to the Eindhoven air base in the Netherlands.


AFP/Donetsk

Ukraine’s prime minister resigned yesterday after his governing coalition collapsed, plunging the former Soviet state into political limbo as it struggles to quell a deadly rebellion in the east.
The shock announcement added to an already chaotic situation in the rebel-controlled east, where international experts are carrying out a complex investigation into the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 that left 298 dead.
Prime Minister Arseniy Yatseniuk said that he was stepping down over “dissolution of the parliamentary coalition and the blocking of government initiatives” after several parties walked out on the ruling group.
The collapse of the ruling coalition paves the way for early elections to be called by President Petro Poroshenko within 30 days.
Although a truce has been declared by both rebels and government forces in the immediate vicinity of the vast crash site, heavy shelling was ongoing nearby including around Donetsk, just 60km from the scene.
Ukraine’s army reported four soldiers killed over the last 24 hours in its offensive to retake the eastern industrial heartland from pro-Russian insurgents.
Countries which lost 298 citizens in the disaster are looking to deploy armed police to secure the impact zone, with the Dutch drawing up a UN resolution on the proposal and Australia already putting 50 officers on stand-by in London.
“On the site it is still clear that nothing is happening without the approval of the armed rebels who brought the plane down in the first place,” said Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, whose country lost 28 citizens in the crash. “There has still not been anything like a thorough professional search of the area where the plane went down, and there can’t be while the site is controlled by armed men with vested interest in the outcome of the investigation.”
While Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans and his Australian counterpart, Julie Bishop, will meet Ukrainian officials, Abbott said that he had spoken to Poroshenko and Russian President Vladimir Putin about the need to secure the site.
A resolution passed on Monday by the UN Security Council called for an independent investigation, unfettered access to the crash site and for the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) to play a lead role in the investigation.
The Ukrainian military said rockets were being fired yesterday “from the Russian side”, hitting locations close to Luhansk airport and in several areas in the Donetsk region.
Mortar shells also rained down on Avdiyika in the Donetsk region, the army said, without giving details of casualties.
An AFP crew heading to one of these combat hotspots on Wednesday was turned back by rebels, who fired shots at their car.
Kiev said two fighter jets that were downed on Wednesday were hit by missiles launched from Russian territory, and that while the pilots ejected safely, there was no information about their whereabouts.
Meanwhile, the Red Cross warned both sides to abide by the Geneva Conventions, declaring that it considered Ukraine to be in a state of civil war.
The EU, which accuses Russia of fanning the rebellion in Ukraine’s east by arming the separatists, will add 15 Ukrainian and Russian individuals and 18 entities to its sanctions list, said a source from the bloc.
The move came just a week after the EU unveiled a round of toughened embargoes against Moscow, which is widely expected to sink into recession this year.
In the debate over more sanctions, Britain ruffled feathers in neighbouring France over its push for an EU arms embargo, as Paris is keen to go ahead with its sale of two warships to Russia.
Poroshenko said yesterday that he was “very disappointed” at France’s insistence on the deal, saying: “It’s not a question of money, industry or jobs. It’s a question of values.”
US intelligence officials have said they believe the rebels mistakenly shot down the Malaysia Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur with a surface-to-air missile provided by Russia.
Moscow has denied the charges and Putin has pledged to “do everything” to influence the separatists and ensure a full investigation into the plane crash.
The first bodies from last Thursday’s crash arrived in the Netherlands on Wednesday to a solemn ceremony.
Dozens more were flown there yesterday to undergo an identification process that Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte has warned could take months.
Dutch police have also been visiting bereaved relatives of the victims to retrieve DNA samples from items such as hairbrushes, and obtain details of tattoos and fingerprints, as well as consulting medical and dental records to help with the identification.
The planes took off from Kharkiv and landed at the Eindhoven air base, where about 200 family members and representatives of the Dutch government were present.
There were 193 Dutch citizens on the Boeing 777-200 bound for Kuala Lumpur from Amsterdam.
Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Vladimir Groisman, citing initial investigation results, said yesterday that the plane had not veered from its preset path as it crossed Ukrainian airspace on July 17.
Russian military officials had previously said the plane had deviated about 14km from its path shortly before it was believed to have been shot down. The Netherlands is leading the investigation.
The Dutch Safety Board said it had granted permission for wreckage to be moved from the crash site, following a request from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).
“This is in order to be able to salvage the remaining victims. The moving of the wreckage will be carried out by local parties,” it stated.