Lethbridge Herald

Jasper crash victims worked at Banff restaurant

- — By LaurenKrug­el inCalgary

Two of the six people who died in a fiery crash in Jasper National Park have been identified by a friend as staffers at an Indian restaurant in Banff.

Deepak Bhatt has set up a GoFundMe page to help Anand Panwar and Pawan Kathait’s families deal with the financial challenges they face as a result of their deaths.

“They both have their families in India. Anand has a boy of six years old and his wife is going to give birth to a new baby in a few days. She is in hospital,” Bhatt said Thursday from Edmonton, where he is helping with arrangemen­ts to bring the remains back to India.

The crash happened about 5 p.m. Tuesday on the scenic Icefields Parkway about 60 kilometres south of the Jasper townsite.

RCMP say a van carrying five people was heading north when it collided with a southbound vehicle with four inside, causing both to catch fire.

Bhatt said Panwar and Kathait were temporary foreign workers who were employed at Masala Authentic Indian Cuisine.

He said he has known Panwar for 12 or 13 years and that his friend had applied for permanent residency.

He said Kathait came to Canada less than a year ago and thatwhile they’d never met in person, they’d gotten to knoweach other through online chats.

Panwar and Kathaitwer­e from the city ofTehri Garhwal in northern India.

The other two people who died in the vehicle have been identified in a separate GoFundMe page as Gelek Wangmo and Ganesh Anala.

The van involved in the crashwas carrying five members of a family from Louisiana andTexas.

Angela Elkins and her son-in-law Nick Copeland died, says a Facebook post from Louisiana Rep. Mike Johnson. Elkins’ husband, Curtis, and daughter, Sarah, were taken to hospital in Edmonton in serious condition.

A toddler, Sarah andNick Copeland’s sonWill, survived with no injuries.

Ronnie Remedies, a friend of the Elkins, said itwas like a punch to the stomachwhe­n he got word of what happened.

But then Remedies, a commercial real estate developerw­ho also owns Shreveport Limousine, sprang to action to help bring the loved ones to Edmonton, where survivors of the collision are hospitaliz­ed.

“Without even knowing howfar it was, I said I’d make it happen,” Remedies said from aboard his plane in Edmonton Thursday.

Remedies said Curtis Elkins owns a pyrotechni­cs business. The two got to knoweach other about five years ago through theirwork in the wedding industry, as Remedies supplies the limousines and Elkins is frequently hired to set up fireworks.

“They always have a smile on their face. And they’re always just very, very friendly people— good Christian people of faith,” he said.

Four family memberswer­e trying to fly to Edmonton onWednesda­y, but the only commercial flights availablew­ould have had them arrive Thursday evening.

So Remedies offered to fly them on his six-seater Beechcraft Baron twin-engine plane and helped them get passports within a few hours.

“It certainly wasn’t an easy thing to do, but it was the right thing to do,” said Remedies.

The relatives arrived at 2:30 a.m. Edmonton time on Thursday.

“I knew theyweren’t going to go to sleep until theywere with them, so that’s why itwas important for them to fly through the night and get them here.”

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