World
Updated : Jul 22, 2014, 09:30 AM IST
Dutch social media users are turning their profile photos black and tweeting the hashtag #BringThemHome as anger mounts that bodies from flight MH17 have not yet been repatriated from Ukraine.
Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans was one of the first to make his Facebook cover photo black in a sign of mourning.
Since then Twitter and Instagram users in the Netherlands and around the world have posted black screens or ribbons, demanding the 298 dead, 193 of them Dutch, be repatriated from war-torn Ukraine. "Making my avatar black in memory of all those in #MH17, to show my support for those affected, and to fight to #BringThemHome," tweeted one user. "Out of respect for the victims of #MH17 my profile pic will be blacked out until all bodies have been brought home. #BringThemHome," tweeted another.
I stand in support of my Dutch friends and everyone else who lost someone. #bringthemhome #MH17 pic.twitter.com/5LJDu73juS
— Sara Alexis Miller (@lunabird444) July 21, 2014
As a show of respect, people are putting their ava on Black until all the victims are home. Do join in, stand together! #MH17 #bringthemhome
— Jana Timmer (@JanaTimmer) July 21, 2014
My avatar will be black until the day they bring the beloved dead back.to their families. #MH17 #bringthemhome pic.twitter.com/pmgdrRQP1w
— RoH (@Roger_J_H) July 21, 2014
Don't mess around with our loved ones..! #MH17 #bringthemhome Indrukwekkende speech van Timmermans at UNSC: https://t.co/MDe1GoDxIy
— Yvonne Schipper (@YvonneSchipper) July 21, 2014
Our avatar has turned black and will remain so until the victims of #MH17 are returned. Join the Dutch in their cause. #BringThemHome
— Radio Carpe Diem (@Radio_CarpeDiem) July 21, 2014
A Dutch-language website and petition bringthemhome.Nl has been set up calling for the bodies' swift repatriation and for the International Criminal Court, based in The Hague, to prosecute those responsible for the disaster, believed to have been caused by a rebel missile. There has been growing international outcry that the bodies have not left Ukraine yet.
A refrigerated train carrying many of the bodies left a station near the rebel-held crash site this evening, and was not expected to reach the Dutch coordination centre in loyalist-controlled Kharkiv before tomorrow morning at the earliest.