Mourners place a placard on Jun 17, 2015 at a temporary memorial to those who died in the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 disaster on the tragedy's first anniversary; Dutch media reported that a permanent memorial design has been announced. (AFP/Michael Kooren) |
THE HAGUE: A forest is to be planted in a park close to Amsterdam's Schiphol airport to commemorate the victims of downed flight MH17, Dutch media reported on Thursday (Nov 26).
The national monument will comprise 298 trees, one for each of the victims of the ill-fated flight, the MH17 Disaster Foundation told the ANP news agency.
"Relatives voted for the most relevant place and decided on the Vijhuizen park, where 298 trees will be planted," the foundation said. The trees will form a giant green ribbon, a symbol worn by the relatives to commemorate the Jul 17, 2014 disaster, with an amphitheatre at the centre.
Three proposals were unveiled earlier this month for monuments to honour the victims, mostly Dutch nationals, killed when the plane came down in eastern Ukraine. A majority of relatives voted for the park project, as Schiphol "is the place where the victims boarded the plane for the last time," the foundation said.
The trees will be lit up at night and will be surrounded by sunflowers in bloom every year on Jul 17, which will radiate in a "golden glow" said the National Forest Fund foundation, which designed the project.
"We had a wish to make this shared loss visible by creating a living monument," it said on its website. "We wanted to create a place where memories can live on, a place where victims can be remembered and cherished by their loved ones."
Dutch-led investigators concluded last month that the Malaysia Airlines flight was shot down by a Russian-made BUK missile fired from rebel-held territory in eastern Ukraine. All those on board died when the Boeing 777 was blown out of the sky en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur. The monument's unveiling is planned for Jul 17, 2017.
Visiting Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Thursday thanked Dutch investigators who led the inquiry into the disaster. After meeting with Prime Minister Mark Rutte, Poroshenko said a separate criminal investigation into the crash was making progress.
"I hope in the middle of December, at least before the end of the year, we will have important information with the evidence about who ... is responsible for this disastrous terroristic attack," he said. Rutte vowed investigators were "working day and night" to be able to pinpoint exactly who was to blame for the disaster.
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