Rebellenleider maakt zich geen zorgen om rechtszaak MH17: 'Het interesseert me niet'
During the MH17 disaster he was the leader of the pro-Russian rebels in Eastern Ukraine: Aleksandr Borodaj. Now five years on the Netherlands starts a lawsuit against the suspects. "I'm not worried at all", Borodaj says in an interview with RTL News.
298 people were killed when flight MH17 was downed over eastern Ukraine on 17 July 2014.
Aleksandr Borodaj, a Russian from Moscow, was at the time of the MH17 disaster leader of the rebels in Eastern Ukraine who were supported by Russia. As Prime Minister of the Donetsk People's Republic, Borodaj was politically responsible for the rebel territory.
Less than a month after the MH17 disaster, Borodaj resigned as prime minister. Nowadays he leads an organisation in Moscow that supports war veterans of the pro-Russian rebels.
Correspondent Martijn Smiers spoke with Borodaj in Moscow. About his memories of the day of the disaster, about the evidence concerning his rebel group and about the annual protest of the relatives against Russia. Watch the interview here.
According to the Joint Investigation Team (JIT), MH17 was shot down by a Russian Buk missile. Allegedly Russia supplied it to the rebels of Borodaj. But according to Borodaj, the rebels didn't have it at all and pictures proving that there was a Buk missile, are fake.
"Ukraine has already presented many photos and phone tapes that were fake. It is technically perfectly possible to use Photoshop to make a very good forgery that just looks real."
But Borodaj can't say from what it can be concluded that the evidence has been falsified.
"Do you know? It's not up to me to prove it. I'm not worried at all. The Buk missile, the photos, the phone calls: it's all noise in the background for me. Why should I deal with noise?"
Tomorrow, at 1:00 p.m., the Joint Investigation Team (JIT) will announce that the Public Prosecutor's Office is opening a trial against a number of MH17 suspects. It is also expected that the investigation team will announce the names of suspects.
Borodaj says that it does not have any concerns about this at all. "Why should I worry?"
The Russian does not feel responsible for the disaster. "Responsibility? No, I don't feel that. Absolutely not. If I did feel responsible or guilty, then I would still be interested in the criminal case."
Will he'll come to court when a judge requests it? "I'll decide that when the time comes. But for the time being I don't care."
The evidence so far points in the direction of Borodaj's rebels. But the chance that Borodaj will have to serve a possible sentence for the MH17 disaster is small: Russia does not hand over its subjects.
BBM