Outrage has been expressed in Russia and Ukraine over a young woman who allegedly boasted on her social media site about using looted mascara from the Malaysian air crash site.

Identified as Ekaterina Parkhomenko from Torez, close to where the Boeing 777 hit the ground after being shot out of the sky, she posted a picture of a blue mascara bottle, say reports.

Her Instagram account then carried two selfies taken with an iPhone which were said to show her after she had applied the Catrice mascara.



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A young pro-Russian Ukrainian woman from the separatist east region of the country has posted pictures of herself on Instagram claiming that she was wearing make-up looted from the downed Malaysian Airlines flight, according to reports from the region

The woman wrote : 'Mascara from Amsterdam, or rather from the field. Well, I think you know what I mean'

The caption read: 'Mascara from Amsterdam, or if to be precise from the field. Well, you understand.'

When she is asked by her own followers if she was joking - and how she got the mascara - she answered: 'An acquaintance of mine, a looter, gave it to me.'

The woman - her age is not known - describes herself as a 'separatist' who 'feels sick and hates everything Ukrainian'.

Homecoming: Another 75 coffins containing the remains of victims touched down in Eindhoven just after 3pm, on board a Dutch C130 Hercules and an Australian C17 (pictured)

Homecoming: The first coffins carrying victims of the crash arrived by plane in the Netherlands on Wednesday for forensic identification, as more came in today (pictured)

Sombre welcome: For the third day in a row hundreds of Dutch people gathered on bridges above the closed motorways to pay tribute to the silent convoy of hearses as it passed underneath

Bloggers in both Russia and Ukraine have questioned whether the posting was a provocation amid a huge propaganda war from both sides, but a number of well-known web writers believe it to be genuine and have expressed horror.



The woman's sites seem to have been well established before they were suddenly removed in the wake of the storm of disgust over this posting from both Ukrainians and Russians.

One said: 'It's good that at least you are not finishing their food off... ?'

The Boeing 777 airliner lost contact near the village Hrabove in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine, about 31 miles from the Ukraine-Russia border and crashed near Torez

She replied: 'But if you wish I can send you the food, and knickers....'

Another asked her: 'Are you normal there?'

She replied 'no' - and soon afterwards deleted her Instagram account and her presence on other social media sites as she was faced with a torrent of abusive comments.

Leading Russian blogger Bozhena Rysnka used her Facebook to declare: 'It is lower than low to pick up mascara from the deceased.'

The woman apparently had no sense she had done anything wrong, she said.

She 'simply an animal, like a dog that gets a pack of biscuits falling from the sky. Can you be angry with a dog for eating it?'

Evidence of looting? The image appears to show a rebel fighter handling a gold ring amid the wreckage earlier this week

Kiev-based blogger Natalia Belous said despairingly: 'And this is a so-called civilian. At least she is not running around with a machine gun.

'Can you imagine what this friend of hers, that 'looter', is like?'

A comment read: 'Even if it is a fake posting - but I don't think so - it is sick, completely sick, from whoever is responsible.'

Earlier this week a picture emerged which appeared to show a ring being taken by a rebel from a body at the crash site.

Meanwhile, an alleged decree by rebel commander Igor Strelkov appears to admit that the bodies of dead passengers were looted by pro-Russian rebels.

The order says that jewellery, watches and other valuables taken from bodies must be handed in to the 'defence fund' of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic by 8pm on Wednesday 23 July.

Styled like other orders from Strelkov, its veracity could not be immediately established.

Mourning: Two women hug in front of a flower tribute at the entrance to the Korporaal van Oudheusdenkazerne, army barracks, in Hilversum, The Netherlands, where the bodies of the people killed in the Malaysia Airlines MH17 air crash in Ukraine will be identified

But if true, it will be seen as scandalous that the rebels are cashing in on the dead victims of the Malaysian plane widely believed to have been shot down by the same pro-Moscow separatists.

Rather than ordering any looted possessions to be returned to the families, it demands they are taken to Strelkov's headquarters so they can be used to fund the insurgency campaign he is conducting.

The text of order number 432, pictured here, says in Russian: 'To all detachments of Donetsk People's Republic army, to soldiers and commanders who from 18 to 21 July 2014 in the area where the Boeing 777 of Malaysian airlines crashed and who possess personal belongings related to this airplane.

'Before 8 pm on 23 July 2014 you must give these things away to the headquarters of DPR army. Valuable items (watches, earrings, lockets and other jewellery) must be sent to the DPR Defence Fund.'

It is signed by rebel army commander Colonel Igor Strelkov, and carries what appears to be an official stamp.

A part of the wreckage is seen at the crash site of the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 near the village of Hrabove (Grabovo), in the Donetsk region

A piece of wreckage from MH17 found at the crash site in Petropavlivka, Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine. More large parts of the downed airliner were discovered today as Dutch investigators took charge of the crash site

The alleged order has been posted on social media websites in Ukraine and Russia.

If true, it would confirm claims by Kiev officials that the bodies were looted.

Her shameless display will be seen as yet another slap in the face to victims' relatives, whose loved ones' bodies continued to arrive home today.

Another 75 coffins containing the remains of victims touched down in Eindhoven just after 3pm, on board a Dutch C130 Hercules and an Australian C17.



They were honoured with the now familiar simple, somber ceremony at the airfield before being taken to the identification centre in Hilversum.

For the third day in a row hundreds of Dutch people gathered on bridges above the closed motorways to pay tribute to the silent convoy of hearses as it passed underneath. Another 38 coffins will be flown in on Saturday, bringing the total to 227.



A Malaysian air crash investigator photographs sections of the wreckage near the village of Hrabove

The OSCE says this is the biggest piece of the Malaysia Airlines plane found so far. The fuselage was found in the forest with some of the windows still intact

Two pet dogs who died on board the plane are also being flown back from Ukraine. Quinta, an eight-year-old Frisian Stabyhound, was flying home to be reunited with her owners, the Nootenbos family. The family of four recently relocated to Kuala Lumpur and had to leave Quinta behind because of quarantine restrictions.

The other dog on board was Costa, a German shepherd pup who was also on his way to be reunited with his owners in the Philippine capital Manila.



Yesterday, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said he would send 40 unarmed military police to east Ukraine to investigate the crash and seek the remaining victims' bodies, while Australian premier Tony Abbott said an extra 100 police would be dispatched to Europe, joining 90 colleague already in London awaiting permission to enter and secure the crash site.

Meanwhile, more wreckage from the Malaysia Airlines plane was found today, including a 'huge piece of fuselage' in a heavily wooded area near the sprawling crash site in Donetsk Oblast.



The search team has also discovered more bodies, after it emerged that as many as 100 of the flight's passengers and crew remain unaccounted for.



The news comes as the head of the Ukrainian emergency services said his workers have been chased away from the MH17 crash site by pro-Russian rebels.



Speaking to journalists at a news conference in the government-controlled city of Kharkiv, Serhiy Bochkovskiy said emergency services personnel also had some of their equipment confiscated.

The new finds have underscored the need for further investigation - even as fighting closes in on the region and farmers desperate to harvest their crops work their fields with heavy machinery.



Newly discovered human remains have been marked with white flags but investigators said they do not have the equipment they need to move them.



