MH17 victims' family hit out at Malaysia Airlines for 'lack of compassion'


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The family of two brothers killed in the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 said Malaysia Airlines lacks compassion - and has not offered them grief counselling.

Harun Calehr, the uncle of victims Miguel and Shaka Panduwinata, said the airline has also left the boys' grandmother stranded in Amsterdam and has refused to arrange a flight home to Houston, Texas.

He said more than a week after the Boeing 777 was shot down over Ukraine, the family's frustration has grown as they felt they had to haggle for help from the airline.

Family loss: Brothers Miguel and Shaka Panduwinata, pictured with Mika Panduwinata (l) and Samira Caleh

Family loss: Brothers Miguel and Shaka Panduwinata, pictured with Mika Panduwinata (l) and Samira Caleh

'One would have hoped that there would have been more compassion, more understanding, and not such a rigid, bureaucratic attitude towards everything that we need,' Calehr said.

'Everything that we got, we had to fight for,' Calehr said.

 

Along with other relatives of victims, the family was put up in a hotel at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport and was tended to by Malaysia Airlines staff in the days after the disaster.

Miguel and Shaka Panduwinata were on their way from Amsterdam to Bali for a vacation with their grandmother when Flight MH17 was shot down, killing all 298 passengers and crew.

Samira Calehr, left, poses with her son Shaka, who was killed with his brother Miguel aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17

Samira Calehr, left, poses with her son Shaka, who was killed with his brother Miguel aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17

The family complains that there has been no offer of any grief counselling by the airline, that it refused to pay for the boys' grandmother to fly home to Texas from Amsterdam and that it has not yet paid out an initial reimbursement of £3,000 it pledged to victims' next of kin.

Addressing the issue of the grandmother's flight, Malaysia Airlines said in a written response emailed to The Associated Press that only 'immediate next-of-kin' are eligible for travel reimbursements. But it added, 'this situation will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis'.

The carrier added that distributing the £3,000 payment to next-of-kin 'requires a thorough verification process'.

'The documentations are being prepared as we speak,' it said.

Miguel Panduwinata, right, poses his mother Samira Calehr

Miguel Panduwinata, right, poses his mother Samira Calehr

Malaysia Airlines did not specifically address the complaint about lack of counselling, but pledged to focus on the needs of family members.

Miguel and Shaka's next of kin are not the only ones who have not received the payout that is meant to cover initial expenses incurred by grieving families.

Silene Fredriksz-Hoogzand, whose son Bryce and his girlfriend Daisy Oehlers died on their way to a vacation in Bali, said she has not received any money yet.

'I'm just waiting,' she said. 'I have the feeling it is not very organised.'




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