Jakarta Globe – AFP, Aug 07, 2014
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| People attend a national day of mourning service for the victims of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Melbourne on August 7, 2014. (AFP Photo/Graham Denholm) |
Melbourne.
Flags flew at half mast Thursday as Australia held a national day of mourning
for those killed in the MH17 crash in Ukraine, a day after experts suspended
the search for body parts.
Australia
lost 38 citizens and residents, including children, when the Malaysia Airlines
plane from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur was shot down over eastern Ukraine on July
17, killing all 298 on board.
Church
bells chimed around the country as a memorial service was held at St Patrick’s
Cathedral in Melbourne, chosen as 16 of the Australians who died were from
Victoria state.
Melbourne
was also the host city for the 20th International AIDS Conference with six
delegates heading to the summit among those killed.
Grieving
families were joined in the cathedral by dignitaries including Prime Minister
Tony Abbott and Governor-General Sir Peter Cosgrove.
Abbott told
the service that the families of those who died had gone through an
unimaginable nightmare.
“Their
plane had been shot out of the sky and 298 innocent people murdered, including
38 men, women and children who called Australia home,” he said.
“There will
be a time to judge the guilty, but today we honor the dead and we grieve with
the living.
“We cannot
bring them back, but we will bring them home, as far as we humanly can,” he added.
Australia
has committed hundreds of police, defense and other officials to the task of
repatriating the Australians who perished but suffered a setback when the
search was called off on Wednesday.
Dutch Prime
Minister Mark Rutte said a deteriorating security in eastern Ukraine meant the
mission could no longer operate safely.
So far, 228
coffins with human remains have been flown to The Netherlands, which suffered
the most casualties in the crash and where the painstaking identification
process is taking place.
Former
Australian defense force chief Angus Houston, who is coordinating the
Australian response to the disaster, said the teams on the ground had achieved
much of what they set out to do.
“When
search and security conditions improve, we will conduct a final inspection to
ensure that we have recovered all identifiable remains,” he said in a
statement.
“We are
committed to honoring the victims of flight MH17 and seeking to give their
loved ones the closure they deserve.”
Agence France-Presse
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