From the BBC:
“Senior Russian official
uncovered as MH17 suspect”
BBC Russian has uncovered the
possible identity of one of the suspects in the case of the Malaysia Airlines
flight MH17, shot down over Ukraine in 2014. Investigators' papers refer to a
high-ranking eastern Ukraine commander as Vladimir Ivanovich. The BBC has learnt this could be Colonel
General Andrei Burlaka, a senior Russian secret service official. Russia has
repeatedly denied any involvement in the shooting down of the aircraft, which
killed 298 people. BBC Russian had audio recordings professionally analysed to
help identify Gen Burlaka. Investigative team Bellingcat also independently
concluded that Gen Burlaka could be Vladimir Ivanovich. Gen Burlaka would be
the highest ranking Russian identified as a possible suspect in the ongoing
investigation into the crash. In telephone conversations published by the
Dutch-led Joint Investigative Group (JIT), representatives of the separatist
Donetsk authorities referred to "Vladimir Ivanovich" as the commander
of the entire operation in eastern Ukraine. Igor Strelkov, a suspect in the case and
former minister of defence in the rebel-held eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk,
had mentioned that he obeyed the orders of Vladimir Ivanovich. Gen Burlaka is
acting first deputy head of the border service of the FSB. The BBC has sent a
request to the agency for comment and is awaiting a response. The BBC also asked
Dmitri Peskov, press secretary for Russian President Vladimir Putin, about Gen
Burlaka. Mr Peskov replied: "We do not know what you are talking
about." The trial of four suspects in the MH17 case is due to resume in
the Netherlands in June 2020. Investigators
say they have proof the Buk missile system that shot down the plane and killed
298 people came from a military base in Russia. According to investigators,
their task is to "expose the whole chain" and find out what happened
that day.
What did BBC Russian learn? From a source with access to personal
databases, the BBC found out that on the day of the crash of MH17 on July 17
2014, Gen Burlaka was in Rostov-on-Don, in southern Russia. The BBC commissioned a professional forensic
voice comparison of the voices of Gen Burlaka and Vladimir Ivanovich, without
saying whose voices they belonged to. Experts concluded that the samples of the
voice of Vladimir Ivanovich as a whole line up with the voice of Gen Burlaka. One
source who confirmed to the BBC the identity of Vladimir Ivanovich claimed that
after the end of operations in eastern Ukraine in 2014-2015, Gen Burlaka
received a pay increase and was awarded the highest state award - Hero of
Russia. The BBC did not manage to find a state decree with the reference to
this award but there are cases when it is given out secretly. What can be identified from open online
sources is that Gen Burlaka received a promotion in 2014 and was promoted from
lieutenant-general to colonel-general. Telephone calls intercepted by the
Security Service of Ukraine referred to Vladimir Ivanovich as the "big
boss who flew in from Moscow." In
total, investigators have records of four conversations in which Vladimir
Ivanovich was involved, and five conversations in which he was mentioned.
Who is Andrei Burlaka? Andrei Ivanovich Burlaka was born in 1965
and graduated from the FSB Academy in 1995, after which he worked as the head
of operational units in Russia's far east. In October 2007, President Vladimir Putin
appointed Major General Burlaka head of the FSB's Sakhalin border department. He
was later promoted to lieutenant-general and transferred to Moscow, where he
eventually became deputy head of the FSB's border service department. In 2014,
when hostilities began in eastern Ukraine, Gen Burlaka flew to Rostov-on-Don at
least three times, according to official travel data shared with BBC Russian. A
source told the BBC all his data was retroactively deleted, but managed to get
the information from an archived copy of the system. At the time the city on
the Ukraine border turned into the main transit point for Russians who wanted
to take part in the conflict on the side of the self-proclaimed republics. On
his third and final trip on July 15, 2014, Gen Burlaka flew Rostov-on-Don from
Moscow. He returned to the Russian capital on 18 July, the day after MH17 was
shot down, and has not returned.
^ There is no doubt that Russia
was responsible for shooting down MH17 and murdering 298 innocent men, women
and children. If Russia wasn’t guilty then they would welcome an international
investigation into the downing, but they refuse to help (since it would only
incriminate them more.) ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-52472142
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