National Post

Families demand Iran sanctions

- Mike Blanchfiel­d

• Families and loved ones of those killed in the shootdown of a passenger jet over Tehran are urging Canada to impose socalled Magnitsky sanctions that would target those directly responsibl­e.

Alise Mills, a spokeswoma­n for the families, says the sanctions regime, named after Russian whistleblo­wer Sergei Magnitsky, would permit Ottawa to freeze the assets and impose travel restrictio­ns on individual Iranians involved.

She said they have been pushing the Liberal government hard for the sanctions in private meetings, but they have met with resistance.

“We’ve come to a point where we don’t understand why this prime minister and his cabinet will not throw down the Magnitsky Act,” Mills said Monday in an interview.

There were 176 people killed when the Iranian military shot down Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight PS752 on Jan. 8, shortly after it took off from Tehran.

That included 55 Canadian citizens, 30 permanent residents and dozens of others with connection­s to Canada. Iran initially denied responsibi­lity for the incident but was forced to admit its role after video footage on social media appeared to show at least one missile striking the jet.

Under internatio­nal civil aviation law, the Iranian government leads the investigat­ion and controls the contents of the plane’s flight recorders. The data was downloaded in Paris in July.

But Canada, Britain, Ukraine, Afghanista­n and Sweden, the countries that lost citizens when the plane was destroyed, found Iran’s disclosure to be lacking.

Foreign Affairs Minister Francois- Philippe Champagne said he isn’t expecting Iran to be any more transparen­t in an upcoming progress report.

“The latest that has been provided was not informativ­e at all. So I am suspicious of what may be coming,” Champagne said.

Champagne has rejected Iran’s July report, which depicted a chain of events where the shootdown could have been avoided.

It said that the Revolution­ary Guard’s surface- toair missile battery had been moved and had not been properly reoriented before it targeted the Boeing 737-800.

The report said the people controllin­g the battery could not communicat­e with their command centre and that they fired twice on a plane that they misidentif­ied without getting approval from their superiors.

Hamed Esmaeilion, a Toronto- area dentist whose wife and nine- year- old daughter were killed in the crash, says he does not believe Iran’s explanatio­n either.

“It was not an accident. It was a murder,” Esmaeilion said in an interview Monday.

“It’s not an air crash, or a plane crash. They murdered 176 people, and we should be completely frank.”

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