Dutch say unlikely to reach MH17 site

Continued violence in east Ukraine will keep an international team, led by the Dutch, away from the site of downed flight MH17 for the "immediate future".

Dutch police say it is unlikely they will be able to access the site of the Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 crash in east Ukraine because of ongoing combat.

The head of the Dutch recovery mission in Ukraine, Pieter-Jaap Aalbersberg, also said 68 Malaysian experts and police officers were expected in Kiev on Thursday to join the group.

The Malaysians will then travel to Kharkiv in east Ukraine, closer to the crash site.

"Unfortunately, we don't expect the security situation to improve enough over the next few days," Aalbersberg told reporters in Kiev.

"This makes it less likely that we will reach the crash site in the immediate future. There is still too much fighting in the area," he said.

Aalbersberg said Dutch police had to scrap plans to visit the site on Wednesday with Australian police and monitors from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

"Tomorrow we will try again from Donetsk," the rebel bastion in east Ukraine where the international mission is stationed, he said.

The plane, with 298 people on board, came down on July 17 in an area of east Ukraine where pro-Russian separatists are battling government forces.

The Netherlands, which is leading the crash probe and body identification, lost 193 citizens on the flight.


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