Children’s bed shaped like missile that downed MH17 plane stirs unease in Russia

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(FILES) - This file picture taken on May 9, 2013 shows a Russia's air defence system Buk-2M arnoured launcher vehicles at the Red Square in Moscow during Victory Day parade. A Russian-made surface-to-air missile has emerged as the most likely cause of the suspected downing of a Malaysian airliner over Ukraine, analysts said on July 18, 2014, as claim and counter-claim swirl over who launched the weapon. The vehicle-mounted "Buk" missile system is capable of soaring to the height of a civilian airliner like Malaysian Airlines flight MH17, unlike more widely available shoulder-launched weapons, defence experts said. AFP PHOTO / YURI KADOBNOV

A Russian firm has caused a stir after putting on sale a children’s bed in the shape of a Buk missile launcher of the kind that shot down a Malaysian Airlines passenger jet in eastern Ukraine in 2014.

International prosecutors said last month the airliner had been shot down by a Buk missile fired from a village held by pro-Russian rebels. Moscow denies any involvement and points the finger at the Ukrainian army. All 298 people on board flight MH17, most of them Dutch, were killed.

The children’s bed, made by the company in St Petersburg, has angered many Russian consumers who have vented their spleen online complaining that it is in bad taste.

But Anton Koppel, who runs CaroBus, which makes unusual furniture for children, shrugged off any political overtones as he spoke next to a camouflage-colored bed crafted to look like the Buk surface-to-air self-propelled launcher.

Retailing at 11,000 rubles ($176.78) at a shopping center in St Petersburg, Russia’s second city, the bed has a red star and Russia’s tricolor flag. But instead of “Buk” it bears the name “Defender” – a concession to angry consumers.

“We didn’t want to traumatize people, many people wrote about this being related to the situation in the Donbass (separatist region), to the downed plane and other horrific things, but this is not what we think,” Koppel told media

He said the bed’s frame was simply a design that had proved popular with customers.

“This is simply a military vehicle which looks really cool. But nevertheless, we understand that people can be different, we appreciate their interest in this. And of course, we didn’t mean to traumatize anyone and we simply renamed it Defender.”