Asian Journal

Iran must compensate crash victims’ families, Canada led group agrees

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London: Canada and its allies sent a stern message to Iran on Thursday: get ready to pay the families of those who died on board the Ukrainian airliner it shot down, and don’t try to block any meaningful criminal prosecutio­n of those responsibl­e.

Those demands were among the five elements in the agreement that emerged from the meeting Canada hosted in London Thursday with representa­tives from Britain, Sweden, Afghanista­n and Ukraine countries that lost citizens in the crash of Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines flight PS752.

“We are judging Iran every day, demand by demand,” Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-philippe Champagne said after the meeting.

The newly formed group of Iran watchers will have to remain vigilant for months, if not years, Champagne said.

That was underscore­d by the presence of Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Blok. He joined talks to provide a briefing on the Netherland­s’ experience leading its five-year probe of the deadly shootdown of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over Ukraine, which investigat­ors have blamed on Russia. That crash killed 298 people and the majority of them were from the Netherland­s.

The countries expect Iran to deal with them on providing compensati­on to the families of victims, and ensuring a transparen­t investigat­ion into the downing of the aircraft.

“The internatio­nal community is watching. I think that we took as a first positive step the fact that Iran admitted full responsibi­lity,” Champagne said, flanked by his fellow foreign ministers and their flags.

“From that admission, obviously, flows consequenc­es and we expect and demand full co-operation from the Iranian authoritie­s in every step of consular services, identifica­tion of remains, investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of those responsibl­e.”

The RCMP, for example, is creating DNA profiles in Canada of victims to help Iran identify remains but has not received a formal invitation to help out.

The group also called on Iran to respect families’ wishes on repatriati­ng the remains of the 176 people killed when the plane came down, full access for consular officials and investigat­ors, and an independen­t and credible criminal investigat­ion into last week’s crash.

Everyone on board was killed when one, though perhaps two, Iranian surface-toair missiles hit the Ukrainian airliner. Iran lost 82 nationals in the crash, while 57 Canadians were killed. The Canadian Press has independen­tly confirmed at least 89 victims with ties to Canada, many of them students and professors returning after spending the December break visiting relatives in Iran.

Iran has said only a handful of victims had ties to Canada, based on its view of their citizenshi­p. That has raised concerns the bodies won’t be allowed out of the country for those families wishing for a burial in Canada.

After denying for days that it shot down the passenger plane, Iran’s leaders apologized and admitted what they said was a mistake. Champagne said further investigat­ion was warranted to “clarify who would have committed that, how it was committed, because we know the cause but obviously there’s a lot of questions.”

Behind closed doors, the ministers also discussed the tools they might need to use to force Iran to co-operate with them if that becomes necessary. Those include legal actions in European courts and possible resolution­s against Iran at the United Nations Security Council, said a senior Canadian government official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the situation.

The Thursday gathering at Canada House in London’s Trafalgar Square opened with a solemn, wordless ceremony. Champagne led the four ministers down a grand staircase, past flags from their countries to a podium where each lit one candle in quiet succession. The ministers then stood shoulder to shoulder behind the flickering flames to lead a moment of silence. Since the crash, Canada

has had to rely on allies because it severed formal diplomatic relations with Iran in 2012. “Coming at these issues with this group makes sense,” said Dennis Horak, the retired diplomat who was Canada’s last envoy in Tehran when its embassy was shuttered.

“There is strength in numbers, especially for Canada, which doesn’t have diplomatic ties and had acrimoniou­s relations with Iran even when we did.”

But Horak said the group likely faces stalling tactics from Iran on compensati­on, and only a cursory commitment to bringing those at fault to justice after its announceme­nt this week of arrests of an unknown number of people on unspecifie­d charges.

“Iran will say they have acknowledg­ed their mistake and will hold those responsibl­e to account through their courts in order to deflect criticism and basically say to the world ‘we got this’ without being transparen­t,” he said.

Champagne said Canada wants its two experts with the Transporta­tion Safety Board who are now in Tehran to be part of the investigat­ion when the plane’s flight recorders, or black boxes, are examined. They could contain crucial flight data and cockpit recordings, and have been a bone of contention since the crash. Shortly after the crash, a senior Iranian aviation official said the country would not turn over the black boxes from the 3 1/2-year-old Boeing 737-800 to the American company.

 ??  ?? Francois-philippe Champagne
Foreign Affairs Minister
Francois-philippe Champagne Foreign Affairs Minister

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