German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed the MH17 flight disaster with British Prime Minister David Cameron and French President Francois Hollande in phone calls yesterday and they agreed that the immediate priority is to secure access to the crash site and to recover the bodies of the victims.
They urged Putin to use his influence over pro-Russian rebels to ensure unrestricted access to the crash site for an independent international commission, a government spokesman said.
The EU foreign ministers will be discussing Russia's response to the plane disaster at a meeting tomorrow and several member nations are pushing for economic sanctions against Moscow.
All 298 people on board flight MH17 from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur were killed when the Boeing 777-200ER aircraft was apparently hit by a surface-to-air missile on Thursday and crashed into a rebel-controlled area near the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine close to the Russian border.
Merkel discussed the situation after the air disaster also with Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbot, Prime Minister of the Netherlands Mark Rutte, Finland's Prime Minister Alexander Stubb and Ukraine's President Petro Poroschenko, the spokesman said.
They agreed that full access for international experts to the crash site must be secured immediately.
Merkel also had a phone call with Putin yesterday for the third time since the plane crash.
She once again urged Putin to use his influence over the rebels to convene a meeting of the contact group rebels as soon possible to agree on a ceasefire in the conflict-hit eastern Ukraine.
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