AP TELEVISION
Hrabove, Rossypne, Eastern Ukraine
1. Close-up of burnt Malaysian Airlines sign at crash site
2. Charred parts of the plane under heavy rain
3. Viktor Sorokin, Hrabove resident, showing small hole from shell at the crash site UPSOUND (Russian) "This is a Grad rocket"
4. Close-up of the tail of the rocket at the crash site
5. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Viktor Sorokin, Hrabove resident:
"There was terrible shelling. Bombardment, cannonade - houses were shaking just like that. There is an impression that they wanted to destroy this place."
6. Local man handling debris at crash site
7. Pan of crash site
8. Burned engines
9. Various of burnt landing gear
10. Teddy bear left at the crash site as a memorial for victims
11. Hands handling piece of shell found at the crash site
12. Charred personal belongings
13. Various of pro-Russian separatist moving the pieces of fuselage
14. SOUNDBITE (Russian) "Kipish", pro-Russian separatist guarding checkpoint near Rossypne:
"Here is Donetsk Peoples Republic. There was fierce fighting here. They say that there is a ceasefire but actually there is no ceasefire. Enakievo, Gorlovka are being bombed all the time by 'our' Ukrainian army."
15. Cutaway of Kipish's arm showing badge with emblem of the self proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic
16. Tower of destroyed tank near Hrabove village at the road to the crash site
17. Remains of destroyed tank
18. Mid of car passing by flowers brought to the crash site
Almere, Netherlands
19. Photos of two victims of flight MH17, Shaka and Miguel
20. Samira Calehr, Shaka and Miguel's mother, reading out loud part of the preliminary report on the cause of the MH17 crash
21. Close up of hands on mobile phone
22. SOUNDBITE (English) Samira Calehr, mother of two victims of flight MH17:
"For me it does not matter if it has been shot down, or it is the fault of Malaysian Airlines, I blame Malaysian Airlines and also the other ones who made the plane crash of course, I mean, it cannot bring our children back here."
23. Picture of 19 year-old Shaka
24. SOUNDBITE (English) Samira Calehr, mother of two victims of flight MH17:
"How would he feel when somebody killed his family, his daughter, his grandchildren, that is all what I can say to Mr. Putin."
25. Picture of 11 year-old Miguel
26. SOUNDBITE (English) Samira Calehr, mother of two victims of flight MH17:
"Well of course it's natural you wanted as fast as it can, so actually I am reaching out for help to the United Nations, to the government to everybody please solve this issue as soon as possible because, I have no words for it, I am speechless."
27. Family photo
Charred personal belongings lay Tuesday amid wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 that was still strewn across fields of Eastern Ukraine more than seven weeks after the jet was shot down.
Chunks of fuselage carrying the Malaysian carrier's logo were lying alongside a pro-Russian rebel roadblock while books, magazines, a child's shoe, and a burned page from a Tagalog language manual lay nearby.
Evidence of the July 17 aviation disaster that killed all 298 people on board the jet remained exposed to the elements as violence between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian rebels continued in the area, according to local residents.
"There was terrible shelling. Bombardment, cannonade - houses were shaking just like that. There is an impression that they wanted to destroy this place," local man, Viktor Sorokin said.
A pro-Russian separatist who was guarding a checkpoint near the area also said that fighting was ongoing, despite a cease-fire declared on Friday.
Meanwhile investigators in the Netherlands - who have not visited the crash site - released a preliminary report that left unanswered key questions about what exactly happened.
Its key conclusion was that the plane had no mechanical or other technical problem in the seconds before it broke up in midair likely after being struck by multiple "high-energy objects from outside the aircraft."
The slow pace of the investigation, its cautious preliminary conclusion and the fact that wreckage and human remains are still lying in Ukraine has frustrated and angered families grieving for passengers who died.
"I have no words for it, I am speechless," said Samira Calehr, a Dutch mother who lost two sons, Miguel, 11, and Shaka, 19, in the crash.
Calehr also had a message for Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"How would he feel when somebody killed his family, his daughter, his grandchildren, that is all what I can say to Mr. Putin."
She added that she wanted the people responsible for the downing of the plane to be brought to justice.