Family of MH17 victim feel ‘satisfaction, but no more’ after guilty verdict
Richard Mayne had been flying out to study maths and finance at the University of Western Australia.
The father of a British student who died when flight MH17 was shot down said he felt “satisfaction, but no more” after three pro-Russian troops were found guilty of his son’s murder.
Simon Mayne, father of Richard Mayne – who was 20 when he died after the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 was shot down in 2014, said the trial in the Netherlands went to “the heart of what it means for nation states to be able to deal with each other”.
Richard had been flying out to study maths and finance at the University of Western Australia after finishing two years of study at the University of Leeds.
Mr Mayne, who lives in Leicestershire, told Sky News: “You just want your son back. You want him back for Christmas. You want him to be able to open his present on his birthday. You want to be able to phone him up when Leicester City beat Nottingham 4-0 and have a chat with him.”
He added that Richard had flown out to Australia to “have the time of his life” and “teach the Aussies how to play rugby”.
Mr Mayne said the court process had been “terribly important”, adding that it went “to the very essence of what it means to be part of a free democratic state like the UK or the Netherlands”.
He said his response to the verdict was “not elation”, but “a small sense of satisfaction that I was witnessing the law in action – I was witnessing proper, civilised international states from the free world behaving as they should – so satisfaction, but no more”.
Russian nationals Igor Girkin and Sergey Dubinskiy, and Ukrainian separatist Leonid Kharchenko, were found guilty at a court near Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport on Thursday of the murder of the plane’s 298 passengers and crew.
Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said the guilty verdicts were “an important step in securing justice for the families of the victims”.
He added: “298 lives, including those of 10 British nationals, were tragically lost on 17 July 2014. Thousands more have been devastated in the years since, as family and friends continue to grieve for their loved ones.
“The downing of MH17 was a shocking violation of international norms which keep our societies safe. It serves as a stark reminder of the human cost of Russia’s actions in Ukraine over many years.”