Ukrainian director Roman Liubyi's documentary
"Iron Butterflies" shows how a cross-border investigation
concluded in 2016 that the plane was downed with a Russian BUK
surface-to-air missile in separatist-controlled eastern Ukraine
- and how Russia responded to the findings.
"This is the perfect example of how truth can be manipulated,
how it can be covered from view," Liubyi told Reuters of
Russia's portrayal of the incident, in which 298 were killed.
"The scale of the manipulation is unimaginable."
International prosecutors said earlier this month that they had
found "strong indications" Russian President Vladimir Putin had
approved the use in Ukraine of a Russian missile system which
shot down the plane but that there was not enough evidence for a
criminal conviction.
Two former Russian intelligence agents and a Ukrainian
separatist were convicted of murder by a Dutch court in November
for helping arrange the Russian missile system. The criminal
investigation was led by the Netherlands, with participation
from Australia, Belgium, Malaysia and Ukraine.
The Kremlin has repeatedly denied any Russian state involvement.
The film, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival last
month, opened at the Berlin Film Festival on Tuesday.
Weaving a collage of news footage, documentary images and
specially-recorded interpretive dance, Liubyi counterposes
videos outlining the findings of the investigation with material
from Russian TV, including a Russian experiment claiming to
disprove the investigators' report and a talk show host decrying
the probe as Western provocation.
In a scene shot following the findings, the Dutch cousin of a
victim tells journalists why he believes a BUK was used, before
lambasting Western governments for continuing to buy Russian
gas.
Liubyi said the West had done too little too late to punish
Russia, emboldening Putin, who went on to invade Ukraine in
February 2022.
"If the world had reacted to MH17 and stopped trading with
Russia, it would have sent a clear message," Liubyi said.
(Reporting by James Imam, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
(Photo: View of the MH17 wreckage as judges inspect its
reconstruction, as part of the murder trial ahead of the
beginning of a critical stage, in Reijen, Netherlands, May 26,
2021. REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw/Pool)
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