Yahoo – AFP,
M Jegathesan, 22 Aug 2014
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) - Black-clad Malaysians observed a minute of silence and a nationwide day of mourning on Friday as the first remains of the country's 43 citizens killed in the MH17 disaster returned home.
Soldiers
carry a coffin with the remains of a Malaysian victim from Flight MH17
during a
ceremony at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang on August 22,
2014
(AFP Photo/Manan Vatsyayana)
|
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) - Black-clad Malaysians observed a minute of silence and a nationwide day of mourning on Friday as the first remains of the country's 43 citizens killed in the MH17 disaster returned home.
People
across the country of 28 million went silent at 10:55 am (0255 GMT), about an
hour after a Malaysia Airlines jet landed with the remains of 20 people killed
when MH17 was blasted from the sky by a suspected surface-to-air missile over
Ukraine on July 17.
Malaysia's
King Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah, Prime Minister Najib Razak and dozens of other
top officials were on hand for a sombre reception ceremony at Kuala Lumpur
International Airport.
Soldiers
carry a coffin with the remains of
a Malaysian victim from Flight MH17 during
a ceremony at Kuala Lumpur International
Airport in Sepang on August 22, 2014
(AFP
Photo/Manan Vatsyayana)
|
Residents
of the capital Kuala Lumpur were overwhelmingly black-clad, including many
Muslim women in black Islamic headscarves, as state television aired
recitations from the Koran and photos of the Malaysian victims.
"No
words can express the sense of loss in seeing the bodies return, my prayers are
with the victims and families of #MH17," Najib said on his Twitter feed.
Dozens of
Malaysia Airlines cabin crew and pilots in their work uniforms, some weeping,
gathered near the welcoming ceremony holding Malaysian flags and white flowers
to remember their lost colleagues.
'Life
must go on'
Shazly, 40,
a flight attendant who gave only his first name, citing a company request
regarding contact with the media, mourned Nur Shazana Mohamed Salleh, who
joined the airline with him in the same 2004 recruitment class.
Relatives attend a ceremony for the return
of the remains of Malaysian victims from
Flight MH17 at Kuala Lumpur International
Airport in Sepang on August 22, 2014
(AFP Photo/Manan Vatsyayana)
|
Some wore
T-shirts with their dead colleagues' names and the Arabic phrase for "See
you in Paradise." Fifteen crew were aboard.
The first
batch of remains included those of Ariza Ghazalee, 46, and her son Muhammad
Afif, 18, part of a family of six wiped out in the disaster.
It was a
far different homecoming than what they had planned -- the family was returning
to live in Malaysia after three years abroad, and Ariza's final Facebook post
had said, "Starting our new migration. Praise God."
Friday's
special flight arrived from Amsterdam, where remains have been taken for
identification by Dutch authorities investigating the tragedy.
All 298 on
board Amsterdam-Kuala Lumpur flight MH17 were killed, including 193 Dutch
nationals.
Malaysia
Airlines flight attendants cry
during the arrival in Sepang of the remains
of the Malaysians who perished onboard
Flight MH17, on August 22, 2014 (AFP
Photo/Mohd Rasfan)
|
A military
guard conveyed the coffins and urns -- at least three people have already been
cremated -- from the plane and into waiting hearses.
Some were
to be put aboard other aircraft for transport to their final resting places
throughout the country.
A number of
prayer sessions and funerals were planned for Friday in mosques, churches and
temples, reflecting Malaysia's multi-ethnic make-up.
The MH17
tragedy has compounded Malaysian grief over the troubling and still-unexplained
disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 just four months earlier.
Healing process
The airline
and the Malaysian government came under fire worldwide for their chaotic
response to MH370, which disappeared on March 8 with 239 people aboard en route
from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
Soldiers
carry a coffin with the remains of a
Malaysian victim from Flight MH17 during
a ceremony at Kuala Lumpur International
Airport in Sepang on August 22, 2014
(AFP Photo/Manan Vatsyayana)
|
Malaysia
Airlines, now in a financial crisis over the double disasters, said in a
statement it was "deeply saddened" by MH17, noting that Friday ends a
"long and painful wait" for next of kin.
The
government has said 30 Malaysians on MH17 had so far been identified. Further
remains will return in coming days.
Malaysian
Twitter feeds filled with sorrow as MH17-related hashtags dominated
top-trending rankings.
Many
expressed hope that Friday's homecoming could help Malaysia find closure from
both air disasters.
"Welcome
home #MH17, and please come back to us #MH370," read one.
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