CNN
MH17: Remembering lives lost
 Eindhoven
 military air base, July 23, 2014: Flowers and a teddy bear are placed 
in front of a plane before a ceremony marking the return of the first 
bodies of passengers on board Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. The bodies 
will be taken to a military barracks in the city of Hilversum, where 
forensic experts will begin the task of identifying and returning them 
to relatives.
Eindhoven
 military air base, July 23, 2014: Flowers and a teddy bear are placed 
in front of a plane before a ceremony marking the return of the first 
bodies of passengers on board Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. The bodies 
will be taken to a military barracks in the city of Hilversum, where 
forensic experts will begin the task of identifying and returning them 
to relatives. Ukrainian soldiers stand next to coffins carrying the remains of the victims during a ceremony at Kharkiv airport.
Ukrainian soldiers stand next to coffins carrying the remains of the victims during a ceremony at Kharkiv airport. International experts march towards a plane at Kharkiv airport to accompany the remains of victims to the Netherlands.
International experts march towards a plane at Kharkiv airport to accompany the remains of victims to the Netherlands. Flowers
 lie on the tarmac as a Hercules transport aircraft of the Royal Dutch 
Air Force prepares to take off from Kharkiv airport.
Flowers
 lie on the tarmac as a Hercules transport aircraft of the Royal Dutch 
Air Force prepares to take off from Kharkiv airport. The Hercules carrying the bodies takes off from Kharkiv airport, as a C17 aircraft from the Royal Australian Air Force taxis.
The Hercules carrying the bodies takes off from Kharkiv airport, as a C17 aircraft from the Royal Australian Air Force taxis. The
 Dutch flag flies at half-staff on the Huis ten Bosch Palace in the 
Hague, the Netherlands. The country declared an exceptional day of 
mourning for the 298 victims of whom 193 were Dutch.
The
 Dutch flag flies at half-staff on the Huis ten Bosch Palace in the 
Hague, the Netherlands. The country declared an exceptional day of 
mourning for the 298 victims of whom 193 were Dutch.  Preparations are made at St. Joris Church in Amersfoort, The Netherlands, for a prayer service for MH17 victims.
Preparations are made at St. Joris Church in Amersfoort, The Netherlands, for a prayer service for MH17 victims. Flowers
 are placed at Schiphol airport as Dutch royals meet the planes with 
grieving relatives and representatives from the 11 countries that had 
citizens among the 298 MH17 victims.
Flowers
 are placed at Schiphol airport as Dutch royals meet the planes with 
grieving relatives and representatives from the 11 countries that had 
citizens among the 298 MH17 victims. Dutch
 King Willem-Alexander, Queen Maxima and Prime Minister Mark Rutte stand
 together as unidentified bodies are transferred to hearses.
Dutch
 King Willem-Alexander, Queen Maxima and Prime Minister Mark Rutte stand
 together as unidentified bodies are transferred to hearses. This aerial photo shows people watching from a bridge as a convoy of hearses makes its way from Eindhoven air base to Hilversum.
This aerial photo shows people watching from a bridge as a convoy of hearses makes its way from Eindhoven air base to Hilversum. Flight attendants and mourners gather near 
flower bouquets as they pay their respects at Schiphol Airport during a 
national day of mourning for the victims of the downed Malaysia Airlines
 flight MH17, in Schiphol July 23, 2014. (VOA)
Flight attendants and mourners gather near 
flower bouquets as they pay their respects at Schiphol Airport during a 
national day of mourning for the victims of the downed Malaysia Airlines
 flight MH17, in Schiphol July 23, 2014. (VOA) MH17 passenger nationalities (VOA)
MH17 passenger nationalities (VOA)
Cris Toala Olivares / Reuters
People pay their respects during a national day of mourning for the victims killed in the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 plane disaster, in Amsterdam on July 23, 2014. The bodies of the first victims from a Malaysian airliner shot down over Ukraine last week arrived back in the Netherlands on Wednesday amid dignified grief tinged with anger. Bells pealed and flags flew at half mast in memory of the 298 people killed when flight MH17 crashed in an area of eastern Ukraine held by Russian-backed separatists, in the first national day of mourning since wartime Queen Wilhelmina died in 1962.
 
  A mother and her daughter reflect at the gate of the Korporaal van Oudheusden barracks, after bringing flowers to remember the victims killed in the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 plane disaster, in Hilvers
 
  A woman lights a candle near flowers and candles placed in honour of three citizens, a mother, 17-year-old daughter and 13-year-old son who were among the victims of flight MH17 in Delft, Netherlands, on July 23.

Dutch Embassy employees hold a minute's silence in commemoration of the victims of the Malaysia Airlines MH17 plane accident in front of the Dutch embassy in Kiev, on July 23.
More:
Tears for the MH17 crash victims: Dutch royals and grieving relatives watch as first bodies arrive back in Holland in dignified ceremony that shames Russia
- Bodies of around 200 international victims of the MH17 plane massacre have arrived in Eindhoven, Netherlands
- Aircraft, which left Ukraine this morning, were greeted by grieving relatives and members of the Dutch royal family
- Torturous identification will now take place, which officials have warned is likely to take several months to complete
- There is concern over the total number of bodies that have been released by pro-Russian rebels in east Ukraine
- Separatists claim they placed 282 complete corpses and body parts from 16 others on board refrigerated morgue train
- But Dutch officials claim they counted only 200 victims, meaning a third of MH17's passengers may still be missing
- Today MH17's black boxes were delivered to the Air Accidents Investigation Branch base in Farnborough, Hampshire
- Dutch air safety board said cockpit voice recorder successfully downloaded and contained 'valid data from the flight'
The first bodies of 
those killed in the MH17 crash have arrived in the Netherlands to be 
greeted by grieving relatives and the Dutch royal family. 
The
 remains of around 40 international victims of the Malaysia Airlines 
tragedy left Ukraine's Kharkiv airport on two military planes earlier 
today, ahead of a painstaking identification process which is expected 
to take several months.
The 
dignified reception at Eindhoven airport is in stark contrast to the 
treatment of the victims' remains in eastern Ukraine in the days after 
the crash, where pro-Russian rebels left corpses to decay in the summer 
heat in body bags dumped around the crash site.
Among those attending the solemn ceremony were King Willem-Alexander and Queen
 Maxima of the Netherlands, who held on to each other's hands as the 
bodies were removed from the transporter aircraft. At several points the
 Dutch Queen was seen wiping tears from her face.

Upset: Queen Maxima of the Netherlands (pictured
 centre alongside her husband King Willem-Alexander) wipes away a tear 
as the bodies of victims of the MH17 crash are removed from an air force
 transport plane and placed in hearses at Eindhoven airport

Arrival: The first bodies of those killed in the
 MH17 massacre have arrived in Eindhoven to be greeted by grieving 
relatives and members of the Dutch royal family. The remains of around 
40 international victims of the Malaysia Airlines tragedy left Ukraine's
 Kharkiv airport on two planes earlier today

The dignified reception at Eindhoven airport was
 in stark contrast to the treatment of the victims' remains in eastern 
Ukraine in the days after the crash

Tears: Members of the Dutch royal family - 
including King Willem-Alexander (second from left) and Queen Maxima 
(centre) - were in Eindhoven to meet the plane. Senior Dutch politicians
 and the grieving relatives of the 298 victims were also in attendance

Finally shown respect: A coffin containing the 
body of an MH17 crash victim is placed in the back of a hearse at 
Eindhoven airport

Released: The bodies of 40 victims arrived at 
Eindhoven airport on two military planes - one of them this Dutch Air 
Force C-130 Hercules - earlier this afternoon

A convoy of hearses containing the remains of 40
 victims of the Malaysia Airlines MH17 disaster drives past 
international flags as it leaves Eindhoven airport en route to a 
military base in nearby Hilversum

Flags - including that of 
Malaysia (centre) were seen flying at half mast as the convoy of hearses
 made their way from Eindhoven military air base
Members of the Dutch royal family - including King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima - were in Eindhoven to meet the plane, alongside the grieving relatives of the 298 people - including 10 Britons - killed when the Boeing 777-200 was shot down last Thursday.
The Dutch government has also declared today a national day of mourning.
200
 bodies were released by the rebels yesterday and 
taken by train to the Ukrainian government-controlled city of Kharkiv, 
raising questions about the condition of the 98 other bodies.
Two
 military aircraft flew these remains to Eindhoven this afternoon, 
where they were met by the royals, Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte, 
and relatives.
The 
Netherlands government will hold a minute's silence before a 
motorcade takes the bodies to the Korporaal van Oudheusden barracks, 
where the process of identifying them will finally begin.
This
 morning the black boxes from flight MH17 arrived in Farnborough, 
Hampshire, where a team of British investigators from the Air Accidents 
Investigation Branch will analyse its contents for clues about what 
happened in the moments before the plane was shot out the sky.
The
 Dutch air safety board said the cockpit voice recorder had been 
successfully downloaded and contained 'valid data from the flight'.

Respect: King Willem-Alexander (second left) 
Queen Maxima (third left) and Prime Minister Mark Rutte (third right) 
observe a minute of silence during a ceremony to mark the return of the 
first bodies of passengers and crew killed in the downing of Malaysia 
Airlines Flight MH17

Remembrance: Stewardesses at Schiphol airport observe one-minute of silence in remembrance of the victims of flight MH17

The whole of Schiphol airport came to a 
standstill for one minute this afternoon in tribute to the victims of 
flight MH17. The doomed Malaysia Airlines plane departed from the 
airport last Thursday

Passengers waiting to board planes at Schiphol airport stand still during a minute's silence

Tribute: There was a minute's silence before a 
motorcade drove the bodies to Korporaal van Oudheusden barracks, where 
the process of identifying them will begin

Salute: A Dutch military musician plays the Last
 Post at the airbase in Eindhoven as the  victims' bodies are placed 
into hearses

Sombre: Hearses are seen lined up at Eindhoven 
airport to transport the bodies to Korporaal van Oudheusden barracks, 
where the process of identifying them will begin

A coffin containing the remains of an MH17 crash victim is carried off the cargo plane at Eindhoven airport
MH17'S BLACK BOX FLIGHT RECORDERS ARRIVE IN UK FOR ANALYSIS BY BRITISH AIR CRASH INVESTIGATORS
Air crash investigators have been able to download 'valid' information from the flight MH17 black box cockpit voice recorder.
The
 Dutch Safety Board which is leading the investigation into the Malaysia
 Airlines tragedy said an international team of investigators, working 
in Hampshire, had conducted a thorough examination of the cockpit voice 
recorder (VCR) .
In a
 statement the board said: 'The CVR was damaged but the memory module 
was intact. Furthermore no evidence or indications of manipulation of 
the CVR was found.

Information: Four
 days after flight MH17 crashed from the sky over Ukraine, rebels 
finally handed
 over the Boeing 777's flight recorders (pictured). The black boxes have
 now arrived in the UK for analysis by British air crash investigators
'Following the examination, the CVR data was successfully downloaded and contained valid data from the flight.
'The downloaded data have to be further analysed and investigated.'
As
 the UK investigators poured over the black boxes, bodies from the crash
 site were arriving in Netherlands where the country's king and queen 
were taking part in a national day of mourning.
King
 Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima are in Eindhoven with relatives of 
the 298 people - including 10 Britons - killed in the disaster.

Critical role: David Cameron tweets that British investigators would be drafted in to examine the black boxes
An unconfirmed number of 
bodies were released by the rebels yesterday and taken to the Ukrainian 
government-controlled city of Kharkiv by train.
Two
 military aircraft will fly some of them to Eindhoven this afternoon, 
where they will be met by the royals, Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte 
and relatives.
The 
Netherlands government said a minute's silence will be held before a 
motorcade takes them to the Korporaal van Oudheusden barracks, where the
 process of identifying them will begin.
Now they have arrived in Eindhoven, the bodies will be taken to the Kaporaal van Oudheusden military barracks in Hilversum, around 65 miles away.
'As
 soon as a victim is identified first and foremost the family will be 
informed and no one else. That can take weeks or months,' said Mr Rutte.
In the central Dutch city of Utrecht, a team of 150 investigators
 has been pulled together to begin the grisly and painstaking task of 
trying to identify the victims.
They
 include police officers, military personnel, forensic dentists and 
other medics, who have been tasked with collecting samples from close 
relatives around the country to help identify the 193 Dutch victims.

A convoy of hearses carrying coffins containing 
the remains of victims of the downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, 
drives from the Eindhoven Airbase to Hilversum

This aerial photo shows people watching from a 
bridge a convoy of hearses carrying coffins containing the remains of 
victims of the downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17

People watch from a bridge a convoy of hearses 
carrying coffins containing the remains of victims of the downed 
Malaysia Airlines flight MH17

The first bodies from flight MH17 arrived in the
 Netherlands today almost a week after it was shot down over Ukraine 
before they were taken to be identified
Jos van Roo, the team leader of the Dutch National Forensic Investigations Team, known as the LTFO, told the Wall Street Journal: 'We have been collecting DNA samples, hair, fingerprints, information about scars or tattoos or moles.'
He
 said this information would then be handed the Netherlands Forensic 
Institute (NFI) which will use sophisticated software called Bonaparte 
to match those samples to the victims.
The NFI said this process was completed in 
around 30 days during an investigation into a 2010 plane crash in Libya, which 
killed 104 people.
But
 with nearly three times as many bodies to examine - and others yet to 
be found - it suggests this investigation could take many months.
Mr
 van Roo said the identification process has been so distressing - even for experienced 
investigators - that the team is being assessed by a psychologist on a 
daily basis.

Grim journey: A refrigerated lorry containing 
the coffins of 40 MH17 victims was seen arriving at Khirkov airport this
 morning. The bodies have since been loaded on to aircraft, reading to 
be transported to the Netherlands

Journey: The first bodies of those killed in the
 MH17 massacre have been loaded on to a cargo plane ready to be 
transported to Eindhoven in the Netherlands for a tortuous 
identification process that could take months

A worker uses a forklift to load bodies on to 
the Royal Australian Air Force Boeing C-17 plane, ready to be 
transported to the Netherlands

Preparation: The bodies of around 200 
international victims of the Malaysia Airlines tragedy have already been
 transported by train from rebel-held city of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine
 to the government-controlled Kharkiv airport (pictured)

Ready: A transport plane that will be used to 
carry the remains of the victims of Malaysia Airlines MH17 downed over 
rebel-held territory in eastern Ukraine, is parked on the tarmac before 
heading to the Netherlands

Tribute: Ukrainian officials attend a farewell 
ceremony next the transport plane that will be used to carry the remains
 of some of the victims of MH17 later today
The number of bodies on board 
the plane taking the bodies to the Netherlands is causing grieving 
relatives around the world fresh anguish after it emerged that as many 
as a third of the passengers could still be missing.
As
 the makeshift morgue arrived in the ‘safe’ Ukrainian city of Kharkiv 
yesterday rebel commanders claimed it contained 282 bodies and 87 body 
parts from an additional 16 people.
This would have accounted for all of the 298 murdered when the Boeing 777 was shot down by an anti-aircraft missile last week.
However,
 after carrying out a body count last night, Dutch forensic experts found the 
number to be ‘significantly less’ than the figure claimed by separatist 
leader Alexander Borodai.
The
 head of the Dutch team leading the investigation, Jain Tuinder, said he
 estimated just 200 bodies had arrived in Kharkiv as well as a number of
 unidentified body parts.
Mr Tuinder vowed to recover the others, saying: ‘They will be found. We have to find them... We
 will not leave until every remain has left this country so we will have
 to go on and bargain again with the people over there.’

Ceremony: A coffin containing the body of an MH17 victim is loaded onto a plane for transport to the Netherlands

Solemn: Four bodies are carried up to a 
transport plane during a ceremony at Kharkiv airport this morning. The 
bodies are being flown to the Netherlands after being recovered from the
 MH17 crash site

Salute: Dignitaries from the Netherlands, (Hans 
Docter, the Dutch Ambassador, third from left) and Australia (ambassador
 Gene Dunn, left of Mr Docter; Colonel Peter Steel, saluting in black 
hat; and retired Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, saluting in green hat)
 watch as the coffin of an MH17 victim is carried towards the plane

Heading to the Netherlands: Honour guards load a coffin of one of the victims of Malaysia Airlines MH17 on to a transport plane
Yesterday morning a train pulled into a station in the government-held city of Kharkiv, where the Dutch investigators took charge of the bodies.
A
 minute’s silence was held before the doors opened and 
international investigators finally began the gruesome task of trying to
 identify those inside. 
There
 had been fears the bodies, including the ten Britons killed, would be 
used as a bargaining chip by pro-Russian separatists – believed to be 
behind the atrocity.
The train’s 185-mile journey from the crash site in the rebel-held village of Hrabove, eastern Ukraine, took 17 hours.
According to the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, there are still human remains lying on the crash site. 
'We
 observed the presence of smaller body parts at the site,' OSCE 
spokesman, Michael Bociurkiw, told a briefing in Ukraine's eastern city 
of Donetsk after his group inspected the site today.
He
 said all recovery efforts seem to have ended but that at the site his 
group saw a plastic bag with some human remains left behind while 
Malaysian experts noticed a strong smell indicating the likely presence 
of more remains in another spot.
'We've
 never really seen that intensive combing over the site - people arm in 
arm going over the fields,' Bociurkiw said, adding there was effectively
 no security at the site and that so far only a small number of 
international experts visited it.
It
 has also emerged that the cockpit is believed to have been sawn in half
 while under the control of Russian-backed separatists. 
International
 monitors said large parts of the cockpit and every part of the fuselage
 were carried off questioning why such important pieces of evidence has 
been tampered with. 
The separatists and Russia have denied shooting down the plane, which was flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur. 
However, the cockpit was found in a section of the crash site which had been 
cordoned off for the first two days after the plane went down. Witnesses
 claim the cockpit had been cut in half with diesel-powered saws. 
'The
 rear part of the aircraft, one of the biggest intact pieces, has 
definitely been hacked into,' Michael Bociurkiw, spokesman for the group
 of international monitors from the Organize for Security and 
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), told USA Today.
The 
investigation has been all the more challenging after rebel militia were
 accused of allowing the crash site's desecration and obstructing the 
process of recovering the bodies of the 298 victims.
In some cases, remains
 have been left out for more than two days in sweltering heat and to 
compound matters the refrigeration unit on the train carrying them to 
Donetsk reportedly broke down.

Tragic journey: A Dutch C130 aircraft carrying 
16 bodies leaves Ukrainian soil bound for the Netherlands following a 
ceremony at Kharkiv aiport this morning. The plane is the first of a 
series of flights to the Netherlands transporting MH17 victims from the 
crash site

Convoy: A transport plane carrying some of the 
MH17 victims departs for the Netherlands from Kharkiv this morning. 
Another military cargo plane loaded with remains is seen of the runway, 
preparing to take off later today
Pro-Russian separatists - who stand 
accused of bringing down the aircraft, possibly with a missile supplied 
by Moscow - bowed to a furious clamour for the bodies and black boxes to
 be handed to investigators five days after the crash.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said
 the boxes were handed over to the Malaysian team in Donetsk at 9pm 
Ukraine time last night.
The small handing over ceremony has finally solved the question as to what had happened to the two vital devices.
It
 was not immediately known what the Malaysian team would do with the 
black boxes, but there was speculation they would pass the boxes on to 
experts with experience of reading the data.
Mr
 Najib revealed that in recent days the team had been working quietly 
behind the scenes to establish contact with 'those' - a reference to the
 rebels - in charge of the MH17 crash site.
The contact was finally made - but he made it clear it had not been easy.
'Under
 difficult and fluid circumstances, we have been discussing the problems
 that have occupied us all - securing vital evidence from the aircraft, 
launching an independent investigation and above all recovering the 
remains of those who lost their lives.'

Emotional: A sign displayed inside Amsterdam's 
Schipol airport - from where MH17 took off - expresses sympathy to 
everyone facing a loss as a result of the crash

Mourning: The Dutch flag flies at half mast on 
the parliament building in The Hague. The Dutch government has declared 
today a day of national mourning for the victims of the MH187 disaster

Flags fly at half mast over the 
Dutch parliament in The Hague. The Netherlands government said a 
minute's silence will be held before a motorcade takes the bodies to the
 Korporaal van Oudheusden barracks near Eindhoven, where the process of 
identifying them can begin
In his first detailed response to criticism of Russia's role in the crisis, President Vladimir Putin called on Western powers not to meddle in Russia's domestic affairs and 
said steps were needed to strengthen the country's military capabilities
 because of moves by NATO and to protect the economy from 'external 
threats'.
The
 Kremlin leader did, however, say that Russia would use its influence 
with separatists in east Ukraine to allow a full investigation into the 
downing of a Malaysian airliner, but said the West must put pressure on 
Kiev to end hostilities.
Meanwhile,
 David Cameron has warned other European countries they must all ‘share 
the burden’ of imposing tougher sanctions on Russia for ‘fomenting’ the 
conflict in neighbouring Ukraine.
The
 Prime Minister admits that the UK economy could suffer from curbs on 
financial deals with Russia, but insists the consequences of failing to 
act could be far worse.
Foreign
 ministers from across the EU meet in Brussels today to discuss imposing
 sanctions on named companies and individuals, but Britain wants to go 
further with embargoes on dealings with the Russian defence, banking, 
energy and aviation industries.
 
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