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Ukraine has accused pro-Russian rebels of trying to destroy evidence of "international crimes" at the crash site of a Malaysia Airlines plane.
It said the rebels "led by Russia" were preventing international experts from starting their investigation.
An OSCE team is for a second day being prevented by militiamen from reaching the wreckage.
The jet was reportedly hit by a missile over a rebel-held area in east Ukraine on Thursday. All 298 people died.
Both Ukraine and the rebels have accused each other of shooting it down.
The Boeing 777 flight MH17 was flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur. It fell between Krasni Luch in Luhansk region and Shakhtarsk in the neighbouring region of Donetsk.
Latest figures released by Malaysia Airlines show the plane was carrying 192 Dutch nationals (including one with dual US citizenship), 44 Malaysians (including 15 crew), 27 Australians, 12 Indonesians and 10 Britons (including one with dual South African citizenship, four Germans, four Belgians, three from the Philippines, and one each from Canada and New Zealand.
Pressure on Russia
In a statement, the Ukrainian government complained that "the terrorists" had taken 38 bodies to a morgue in the rebel-held city of Donetsk.
It said the rebels were also trying to transport the plane's wreckage to Russia.
Rescue workers carry the body of one of the victims. Photo: 19 July 2014The UN Security Council has called for a full and independent international investigation into the crash
Flowers, teddy bears and a note reading "Remember. Mourn" lie at the crash site. Photo: 19 July 2014The tragedy has sent shocked the world community
OSCE observers inspect the site of the crash in eastern Ukraine under the watchful eye of armed rebels - 18 July 2014The 25-man observer team left the crash site after just over an hour on Friday
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Analysis: Bridget Kendall, BBC News, Moscow
Both Britain and the US are now publicly pointing the finger at rebels in eastern Ukraine and maybe Russia as well.
Both say they think the Malaysian airliner was probably shot down by a missile fired from rebel-held territory - and perhaps with Russian help.
But turn on Russian TV and you enter a parallel universe, where Kiev, not Moscow, is the likely culprit: speculation that Ukrainian jets may have tailed the airliner before it crashed; colourful theories that maybe Ukrainian forces were really trying to target Putin's Presidential jet and got the wrong plane.
The question is which version is shaping President Putin's thinking. And whose opinion will he bear in mind as he decides how to handle this crisis.
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The world community, Ukraine added, must put pressure on Russia to pull back its terrorists and allow Ukrainian and international experts to carry out their inquiry.
Speaking in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong-Lai said it would be "inhumane" if Malaysian experts would not be given access to the crash site.
He also expressed concern that the site was not properly sealed and could be tampered with.
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said it was essential for investigators to get full access to the crash site.
"Quite possibly there are attempts in place to sanitise the site. The site needs to be secure. The investigation needs to take place. And frankly anyone who tries to obstruct this is no friend of justice, is no friend of peace," he said.
Russia has meanwhile hit back at the West, accusing it of waging an information war against Moscow.
The defence ministry challenged Ukraine to produce details of what its anti-aircraft systems were doing at the time of the crash.
Confusion remains as to whether the plane's flight recorders - the so-called black boxes - have been found.
After initial claims that they had been located, and one sent to Russia, a Donetsk separatist leader, Aleksander Borodai said they had been not yet been discovered.
'Act of terrorism'
Meanwhile, the team from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) is now at the crash site.
It says that after an initial refusal, armed rebels allowed the observers to proceed on foot - but blocked their access to the fields where the wreckage is.
However, OSCE spokesman Michael Bociurkiw said the monitors were seeing parts of the field they had not seen before.
On Friday, the observers said the rebels had limited their access to the wreckage, with one gunman firing shots into the air.
Ukraine's government called Thursday's disaster an "act of terrorism" and released what they say are intercepted phone conversations that proved the plane was shot down by separatists.
Ukrainian officials also said they had evidence Russia military personnel operated a sophisticated Buk missile system that is thought to have been used to shoot down the plane.
The pro-Russian separatists claim a Ukrainian air force jet brought down the airliner.

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