MH17 victims’ families to get $5 000

Linda Pabellon, left, and Tirso Pabellon, sister and brother respectively of Irene Pabellon Gunawan, one of three Filipinos who perished in the Malaysia Airlines MH17 passenger plane crash. Picture: Bullit Marquez

Linda Pabellon, left, and Tirso Pabellon, sister and brother respectively of Irene Pabellon Gunawan, one of three Filipinos who perished in the Malaysia Airlines MH17 passenger plane crash. Picture: Bullit Marquez

Published Jul 21, 2014

Share

Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia Airlines said on Monday it would make an initial payment of $5 000 to families of passengers aboard its crashed flight MH17 as a goodwill gesture.

The national carrier said it would provide the money to each passenger's immediate family “as goodwill to ease... their economic needs”.

“Funds have already been made available for this purpose,” it said in a statement.

“This financial assistance will not be offset against the final compensation, nor affect the families' legal rights to claim.”

The airline said it was also providing families with hotel accommodation, meals and transport assistance, in addition to counselling.

MH17 crashed over strife-torn eastern Ukraine on Thursday on its way from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur with 283 passengers and 15 crew aboard.

It is believed to have been shot down by a missile. The United States has blamed separatist rebels and said they used a missile system supplied by Moscow.

It is the second ill-fated Malaysia Airlines plane this year after flight MH370 mysteriously disappeared en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, carrying 239 people.

The jet, also a Boeing 777-200 like MH17, is believed to have veered off course and crashed in the southern Indian Ocean but no wreckage has been found.

Malaysia Airlines has been struggling financially for years, accumulating losses totalling $1.3 billion over the past three years.

MH370's disappearance pulled down its first-quarter results. State fund Khazanah Nasional, which holds the airline's purse strings, said in June it would announce a turnaround plan within six to 12 months. - AFP

Related Topics: