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Russia has raised doubts that the weapons being transported by the Antonov plane that crashed near Kavala in Greece on Saturday evening were destined for Ukraine and not Bangladesh.
Highly reliable Greek diplomatic sources said that the Russian government has officially asked the Greek side for information regarding the type of cargo that was being transported on board the Antonov 12.
Although Greece rejected the Russian request for information, Athens did not delay in protesting to the Serbian government regarding its non-notification of the transport of weapons on Greek air.
The area in which the plane fell remains surrounded and under strict quarantine by the Greek army forces who, as soon as they collect the shells scattered in the corn plots where the plane fell, will be destroyed, and then the remains will be covered with excavators.
Earlier, the Serbian president stated that the cargo was weaponry for maneuvers and that permission should not be sought from Greece for its transport, but the examination of the remains proves that the cargo was military shells of 120 mm caliber, land mines and 35 mm rockets for mounted platforms on Mi 6 and Mi 8 helicopters of the Ukrainian army.
Meanwhile, sources from the Greek foreign ministry told Top Channel that the cargo was paid for by an ‘off shore’ company in the Cayman Islands, which has ties to the Ukrainian government, while the Ukrainian company that owns the Antonov that crashed, Meridiana, has a contract with NATO for the transport of materials destined for Bulgaria and Poland, from where the military materials are directed to Ukraine.
The Ukrainian media declared that the 8 victims have been declared heroes of Ukraine, while they also published the itineraries of the last days of the Antonov 12 plane, which confirms the variant that the plane often loaded cargo destined for Burgas and Ostrava.
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