19 Mar 2024
Saturday 18 January 2020 - 14:16
Story Code : 368314

Canada says black boxes from Iran crash should be sent to France

Reuters - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday urged Iran to send the black boxes from the passenger plane shot down by its forces to France for analysis and said the first remains of victims should soon arrive back in Canada.

Trudeau told a news conference in Ottawa that France was one of the few countries with the ability to read the flight and cockpit data recorders from the jet, which he said were badly damaged.

Iran says it shot down Ukrainian International Airlines flight 752 last week by accident, killing all 176 people aboard, 57 of whom were Canadian.

Iran does not have the level of technical expertise and mostly the equipment necessary to be able to analyze these damaged black boxes quickly, Trudeau said.

There is a beginning of a consensus that ... (France) would be the right place to send those black boxes to get proper information from them in a rapid way and that is what we are encouraging the Iranian authorities to agree to.

In the week since Tehran said its military had shot down the aircraft, Irans government has said international authorities looking into the tragedy would have access to the black-box data, but that has yet to happen, slowing the investigation.

More than two thirds of Canadians are not confident there will be a full and accurate account of the disaster, an Angus Reid Institute poll released on Friday said.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif held a rare face-to-face meeting with his Canadian counterpart, Francois-Philippe Champagne, on Friday in Muscat, Oman. The two countries have not had diplomatic relations since 2012.

In a statement, Canadas foreign ministry said Zarif agreed on the need for a transparent analysis of the black box data, and that the ministers discussed the duty Iran has towards the families of the victims including compensation.

Zarif wrote on Twitter after the meeting that both countries experts would continue to exchange information, adding politicization of the tragedy must be rejected and that the focus should be on the victims families.

BITTER TRAGEDY

In Ottawa, Trudeau told reporters his government would provide C$25,000 ($19,100) in immediate aid to the families of the victims, but he added that Canada expects Iran to offer compensation.

Trudeau said about 20 families of Canadian victims had requested the return of the bodies and that he expected the first remains to be repatriated in the coming days. He gave no further details.

The bodies of all 11 Ukrainians who died in the crash have been identified and will be transported to Ukraine on Jan. 19, the interior ministry in Kiev said in a statement.

With Iran facing a deepening crisis as it grapples with unrest at home and rising pressure from abroad, the Islamic Republics supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivered his first Friday prayers sermon in eight years.

He described the shooting down of the plane as a bitter tragedy that burned through our heart. But he stopped short of offering a direct apology for the disaster and instead urged Iranians to unite and show solidarity by turning out in numbers for the February parliamentary election.

Tension between Tehran and Washington has ratcheted higher since 2018 when the United States withdrew from Irans nuclear pact with world powers and reimposed sanctions that have hammered the Iranian economy.

The standoff erupted into tit-for-tat military strikes this month, when Washington killed Irans top general Qassem Soleimani in a drone strike at Baghdad airport on Jan. 3, then Iran launched missile strikes at U.S. targets in Iraq on Jan. 8.

In the tense hours following those strikes, the Ukrainian airliner was shot down in error as it took off from Tehran.

Russia lent Iran some support over the disaster, saying on Friday that the airliner had been shot down when Irans military was spooked by reports of advanced U.S. F-35 stealth fighters in the air in the Iranian border area.

Id like to underline the edginess that always accompanies such situations, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in Moscow, adding that the incident was human error and that he was not trying to excuse anyone for what happened.

The White House declined to comment, and the Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment.


Reporting by Steve Scherer; Additional reporting by David Ljunggren and Kelsey Johnson in Ottawa, Parisa Hafezi and Babak Dehghanpisheh in Dubai, Alla Swilam in Cairo, Andrew Osborn in Moscow, Steve Holland and Phil Stewart in Washington, Matthias Williams in Kiev, Tim Hepher in Paris, and Tracy Rucinski in Chicago; Editing by Howard Goller and Daniel Wallis




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