Tragic and will set back Aids research years. I doubt however that it has anything to do with Russian opinions on gays, just my opinion of course. Underground blogs have already spotted evidence indicating a military transport aircraft was in the area and was the intended target. This missile system has an automatic target assessment program that once launches, is able to switch targets on it's own, based purely on target size. Since the 777 was much larger than the alleged transport plane targeted, it seems likely this is what happened.
Tig
Huey said
Jul 19, 2014
skewedButNotBroken wrote:
First of all, I must confess that I'm somewhat of a conspiracy theorist but I just got through watching a CNN special on this tragedy and they stated that numerous commercial air flights have flown over this war-torn area in the recent past. They did state, however, that many airlines had opted out of flying over this region. However, it seems very suspicious to me that this airline carrying these researchers were shot down...
considering Russia's stance on gays, it is not surprising
skewedButNotBroken said
Jul 19, 2014
First of all, I must confess that I'm somewhat of a conspiracy theorist but I just got through watching a CNN special on this tragedy and they stated that numerous commercial air flights have flown over this war-torn area in the recent past. They did state, however, that many airlines had opted out of flying over this region. However, it seems very suspicious to me that this airline carrying these researchers were shot down...
Huey said
Jul 19, 2014
Wow...What a setback,
TazKat said
Jul 19, 2014
so sad!!!!!!
wmlj1960 said
Jul 19, 2014
I would have gladly taken their place. So tragic!
Isiscat2011 said
Jul 18, 2014
Don't know if you all heard but the plane that crashed on route to Australia was carrying a group of Aids researchers. Very sad news. May they rest in peace.
Aids conference says 100 researchers may have been on flight MH17
As many as 100 of the worlds leading HIV/Aids researchers and advocates may have been on the Malaysia Airlines flight that crashed in Ukraine, in what has been described as a devastating blow to efforts to tackle the virus.
Delegates to a plenary session held ahead of the Aids 2014 conference were told that email exchanges showed about 100 attendees were booked on the MH17 flight. The plane was downed in eastern Ukraine by what the US and Australian governments have described as a surface-to-air missile.
There was no official confirmation of the number of researchers on board.
There were no survivors among the 298 people on the flight, which was bound for Kuala Lumpur from Amsterdam. The Aids 2014 conference, due to start on Sunday, is being held in Melbourne.
Theres a huge feeling of sadness here, people are in floods of tears in the corridors, Clive Aspin, a veteran HIV researcher who attended the pre-conference plenary session in Sydney, told Guardian Australia. These people were the best and the brightest, the ones who had dedicated their whole careers to fighting this terrible virus. Its devastating.
Prof. Richard Boyd, director of the Monash Immunology and Stem Cell Laboratories, told Guardian Australia he was "gutted" by the losses.
"There were some serious HIV leaders on that plane," he said. "This will have ramifications globally because whenever you lose a leader in any field, it has an impact. That knowledge is irreplaceable.
"We've lost global leaders and also some bright young people who were coming through. It's a gut-wrenching loss. I was involved in the aftermath of 9/11 in New York and it brings back that level of catastrophe.
"But the Aids community is very close-knit, like a family. They will unite and this will galvanise people to strive harder to find a breakthrough. Let's hope that, out of this madness, there will be new hope for the world."
Trevor Stratton, an HIV/Aids consultant, told the ABC: The cure for AIDS may have been on that plane, we just dont know. You cant just help but wonder about the kind of expertise on that plane.
A number of leading scientists, including a former president of the International AIDS Society (IAS) who has led HIV research efforts since 1983, are believed to be among the dead.
Organisers of Aids 2014, which is set to welcome about 14,000 delegates from around the world, said they were unable to officially confirm the number of people on MH17 who were due to attend the conference. The organisation said in a statement: The IAS is hearing unconfirmed reports that some of our friends and colleagues were on board the flight and if that is the case this is truly a sad day.
The president of the IAS, Françoise Barré-Sinoussi, told a prearranged event in Canberra that the deaths will be a great loss to the HIV/Aids communities. If confirmed, it would be a terrible loss for all of us. I have no words really to try to express my sadness; I feel totally devastated if it is confirmed.
IAS said the conference would go ahead as scheduled. Former US president Bill Clinton and activist Bob Geldof are due to speak.
The executive director of the Australian Federation of Aids Organisations, Rob Lake, said: "This morning's news is absolutely tragic and will be felt throughout the conference and worldwide.
The people we have lost have played critical roles in the global fight against HIV.
Thank you Wayne. This is a global tragedy...
Tig
A bit more detail on those lost in the crash..
In Memorium: AIDS 2014 Delegates Lost in Malaysian Airlines Crash
Tragic and will set back Aids research years. I doubt however that it has anything to do with Russian opinions on gays, just my opinion of course. Underground blogs have already spotted evidence indicating a military transport aircraft was in the area and was the intended target. This missile system has an automatic target assessment program that once launches, is able to switch targets on it's own, based purely on target size. Since the 777 was much larger than the alleged transport plane targeted, it seems likely this is what happened.
Tig
considering Russia's stance on gays, it is not surprising
First of all, I must confess that I'm somewhat of a conspiracy theorist but I just got through watching a CNN special on this tragedy and they stated that numerous commercial air flights have flown over this war-torn area in the recent past. They did state, however, that many airlines had opted out of flying over this region. However, it seems very suspicious to me that this airline carrying these researchers were shot down...
Wow...What a setback,
so sad!!!!!!
I would have gladly taken their place. So tragic!
Don't know if you all heard but the plane that crashed on route to Australia was carrying a group of Aids researchers. Very sad news. May they rest in peace.
Aids conference says 100 researchers may have been on flight MH17
As many as 100 of the worlds leading HIV/Aids researchers and advocates may have been on the Malaysia Airlines flight that crashed in Ukraine, in what has been described as a devastating blow to efforts to tackle the virus.
Delegates to a plenary session held ahead of the Aids 2014 conference were told that email exchanges showed about 100 attendees were booked on the MH17 flight. The plane was downed in eastern Ukraine by what the US and Australian governments have described as a surface-to-air missile.
There was no official confirmation of the number of researchers on board.
There were no survivors among the 298 people on the flight, which was bound for Kuala Lumpur from Amsterdam. The Aids 2014 conference, due to start on Sunday, is being held in Melbourne.
Theres a huge feeling of sadness here, people are in floods of tears in the corridors, Clive Aspin, a veteran HIV researcher who attended the pre-conference plenary session in Sydney, told Guardian Australia. These people were the best and the brightest, the ones who had dedicated their whole careers to fighting this terrible virus. Its devastating.
Prof. Richard Boyd, director of the Monash Immunology and Stem Cell Laboratories, told Guardian Australia he was "gutted" by the losses.
"There were some serious HIV leaders on that plane," he said. "This will have ramifications globally because whenever you lose a leader in any field, it has an impact. That knowledge is irreplaceable.
"We've lost global leaders and also some bright young people who were coming through. It's a gut-wrenching loss. I was involved in the aftermath of 9/11 in New York and it brings back that level of catastrophe.
"But the Aids community is very close-knit, like a family. They will unite and this will galvanise people to strive harder to find a breakthrough. Let's hope that, out of this madness, there will be new hope for the world."
Trevor Stratton, an HIV/Aids consultant, told the ABC: The cure for AIDS may have been on that plane, we just dont know. You cant just help but wonder about the kind of expertise on that plane.
A number of leading scientists, including a former president of the International AIDS Society (IAS) who has led HIV research efforts since 1983, are believed to be among the dead.
Organisers of Aids 2014, which is set to welcome about 14,000 delegates from around the world, said they were unable to officially confirm the number of people on MH17 who were due to attend the conference. The organisation said in a statement: The IAS is hearing unconfirmed reports that some of our friends and colleagues were on board the flight and if that is the case this is truly a sad day.
The president of the IAS, Françoise Barré-Sinoussi, told a prearranged event in Canberra that the deaths will be a great loss to the HIV/Aids communities. If confirmed, it would be a terrible loss for all of us. I have no words really to try to express my sadness; I feel totally devastated if it is confirmed.
IAS said the conference would go ahead as scheduled. Former US president Bill Clinton and activist Bob Geldof are due to speak.
The executive director of the Australian Federation of Aids Organisations, Rob Lake, said: "This morning's news is absolutely tragic and will be felt throughout the conference and worldwide.
The people we have lost have played critical roles in the global fight against HIV.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/18/aids-conference-says-100-researchers-may-have-been-on-board-crashed-plane