The Dutch Safety Board says Russian made Buk missile was responsible Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 which crashed in July 2014 killing all the 298 people on board.
The missile hit the front left of the plane causing other parts to break off, it said in a final report on the disaster. The West and Ukraine say Russian-backed rebels brought down the Boeing 777, but Russia blames Ukrainian forces. The report does not say who fired the missile, but says airspace over eastern Ukraine should have been closed.
The plane – flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur – crashed at the height of the conflict between government troops and pro-Russian separatists. Most of the victims were Dutch – 196, including some with dual nationality. The other passengers and crew were nationals from 10 countries.
A separate Dutch-led criminal investigation is under way. The report says the three crew members in the cockpit were killed by the missile explosion instantly. However, it adds, it was unclear at which point the others died, and the possibility of some remaining conscious for some time during the one-and-a-half minutes it took for the plane to go down could not be ruled out.
Presenting its findings at the Gilze-Rijen military base in the Netherlands, the safety board showed plane parts that had been brought back from the rebel-held Donetsk region and reconstructed. Board president Djibbe Joustra said the impact pattern could not have been caused by a meteor, an air-to-air missile or an internal explosion. Instead, he said, a warhead carried by a surface-to-air missile had detonated above the left-hand side of the cockpit, causing structural damage.
Mr Joustra said the missile was a Buk – which experts say both Russian and Ukrainian armies possess.