The Niagara Falls Review

Military unsure how to raise wreckage

Defence minister says investigat­ion into crash could take ‘over a year’

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OTTAWA—The Canadian military is still determinin­g how to raise the wreckage of a military helicopter that crashed into the Mediterran­ean Sea last week, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said Thursday.

The crash killed six members of the Canadian Forces, though the remains of only one, Sub-Lt. Abbigail Cowbrough, have been recovered.

“We are actively working on options to recover the remaining fuselage, which will assist with the investigat­ion,” Sajjan said. A seven-member team investigat­ing the exact reasons for the crash is working from Italy, he said, and a parallel military investigat­ion of the related circumstan­ces is also underway.

The flight data recorders have been recovered and are being analyzed in Canada.

“This could take ... over a year,” Sajjan said. But the families of the dead will be kept informed and so will the public, he promised.

Chief of the defence staff Gen. Jonathan Vance said the crash will be probed thoroughly, but details about what happened to the Cyclone helicopter won’t be revealed in dribs and drabs.

“What you must know is that when that investigat­ion is complete, or when it’s appropriat­e in the judgment of the (investigat­ors), the families will be told first. Unadultera­ted, told exactly what they’ve got,” Vance said. “And then the public will be told.

“And so I know there’s great interest in speed here. We’re more interested in accuracy. There’s nothing self-evident about a crash.”

The helicopter was deployed aboard HMCS Fredericto­n on a NATO mission. The military says it was returning to the ship after a training exercise when it crashed.

Military statements, and Vance himself, first said the ship had “lost contact” with the helicopter, though the Forces later acknowledg­ed that crew aboard the Fredericto­n saw it go down in deep water.

He said Thursday that the emphasis immediatel­y after the crash was on seeking survivors, which was why the operation was first labelled a “search and rescue,” though it later came to be called a recovery.

“The reporting was done as best as we could, given the frantic, profession­al, intense effort by that crew, doing what they needed to do, and at the same time report up,” Vance said.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attended a repatriati­on ceremony at Canadian Forces Base Trenton on Wednesday, for Cowbrough’s remains and symbols of the other five crash victims who are missing and presumed dead.

Those are Capt. Brenden Ian MacDonald, Capt. Kevin Hagen, Capt. Maxime Miron-Morin, Sub-Lt. Matthew Pyke and Master Cpl. Matthew Cousins.

Trudeau said Thursday that he’d spoken to each of the six service members’ loved ones.

“All of them were heartbroke­n but all of them were also immensely proud of the life of service chosen by their loved one, as are we all,” Trudeau said.

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Crew members of HMCS Fredericto­n salute during a repatriati­on ceremony on Wednesday at CFB Trenton.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS Crew members of HMCS Fredericto­n salute during a repatriati­on ceremony on Wednesday at CFB Trenton.

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