Putin cannot avoid me: Australia PM

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott talks to Netherlands Prime Minister Mark Rutte (not pictured)during a meeting with cabinet ministers in Canberra on November 6, 2014. Rutte is in Australia to discuss the MH17 flight crash that killed 298 passengers and crew on route to Amsterdam from Kuala Lumpur in July 17. AFP Photo

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Nov. 6 warned Vladimir Putin he will not be able to avoid a "conversation" over the loss of Australian lives in the downing of Flight MH17 over Ukraine.
      
Last month Abbott vowed to "shirtfront" the Russian president at the G20 summit in Brisbane next week, although Moscow has yet to respond to his request for a bilateral meeting.
      
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev responded to the rhetoric by saying Putin was a judo black-belt and that "serious politicians should chose their words carefully".
      
Shirtfronting is an Australian Rules Football sporting term in which a player charges an opponent.
      
"He won't be able to avoid the conversation, so one way or another we're going to have the bilateral -- whether it's in the corridor or in a more formal setting," Abbott told The Australian newspaper.
      
However, he said he did not want the G20 to be overshadowed by their rift, with government sources saying the pair could instead meet at the prior APEC summit in Beijing starting on Monday.
      
"What I won't be doing is disrupting the sessions of the G20 with a private argument between Australia and Russia," Abbott said.
      
"But I am seeking a bilateral with him at the earliest possible opportunity, which will be a chance to emphasise how important it is to Australia -- and indeed to The Netherlands, Malaysia and all the other countries that had people on MH17 -- that there be full co-operation with the investigation.        

"And if criminal prosecutions loom, full co-operation with them."       

The Malaysian Airlines passenger jet was shot down over eastern Ukraine in July, killing all 298 people on board. Most of...

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