The Standard (St. Catharines)

Offer to plane-crash families rejected

Goodale says no to Iran’s compensati­on proposal to Canadian victims of downed Ukraine jet

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — Canada’s special adviser on the Iranian military’s downing of a passenger jet one year ago this week is rejecting Tehran’s offer to pay $150,000 to the families of those killed in the tragedy.

Ralph Goodale, the former Liberal public safety minister, says Iran doesn’t have the right to offer compensati­on to victims’ families unilateral­ly.

Goodale told The Canadian Press the final amount will be subject to negotiatio­ns between Iran and Canada and the four other countries whose citizens were killed on the plane.

Iranian state television announced Dec. 30 the Tehran government was setting aside $150,000 for each family that lost someone on the plane. The announceme­nt caught Canada and the other countries offguard and appeared intended to mitigate the growing criticism of Iran as the one-year anniversar­y of the killings approached.

“There is a negotiatin­g process that has yet to take place,” said Goodale. “But it hasn’t yet begun. So, it’s a bit premature for a number to be circulated in the public domain, because none of the other parties involved in this process have had any input whatsoever.”

Goodale was appointed last March to lead Canada’s response to the Jan. 8, 2020, shooting down of Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight 752 by Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard that killed all 176 people on board.

They included 55 Canadian citizens, 30 permanent residents and 53 more travellers bound for Canada, including many Iranian students, as well as citizens of Britain, Afghanista­n, Sweden and Ukraine.

Goodale, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other government members are to meet privately Thursday in a virtual event with families and loved ones of those who perished.

Trudeau has spoken to all of them recently, said Goodale, and he will reaffirm his commitment to declare Jan. 8 a national day of remembranc­e for the victims of airline disasters. There will also be discussion about building a memorial, but the government wants the full input of families on how it might look and where in Canada it will be erected, Goodale added.

Meanwhile, the push continues for Iran to reveal the exact details about why the tragedy occurred — what prompted a unit of its Revolution­ary Guard to fire on the civilian plane. Neither Goodale nor Foreign Affairs Minister François-philippe Champagne expects any definitive report coming from Iran any time soon.

“I’m not holding my breath. But certainly, we will be prepared to review that with the Transport Safety Board, and also the forensic team that we’ve put together,” Champagne said in a recent interview.

Under the Chicago Convention that governs internatio­nal civil aviation law, Iran is the lead investigat­or of the incident because the plane was felled on its soil. The fact the Iranian military shot it down and has every incentive to cover up the true cause is the reason why Goodale says Canada is pursuing changes to the global civil aviation legal framework to prevent that in the future.

The doomed Kyiv-bound flight was one of several commercial airliners that were permitted to take off from Tehran that fateful night even though the Iranian military had fired missiles at U.S. military bases in neighbouri­ng Iraq just hours earlier. The attack was Iran’s planned retaliatio­n for the targeted drone killing of Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani, ordered days earlier by U.S. President Donald Trump.

Goodale said the fundamenta­l question that needs answering is, given Iran had “planned and executed” a military attack, “Why in the world did Iran keep its airspace open?”

He has other questions: “What did you do to alert the airline companies and their crews that this activity was taking place so that they could make their own decisions about whether they were going to take off or not?”

The Iranian government released an interim report in July, which Canada criticized as lacking, that said the Revolution­ary Guard’s surface-to-air missile battery had been moved and had not been properly reoriented before it targeted the Boeing 737-800.

Under the Chicago Convention, Iran is expected to publish a report around the one-year anniversar­y of the incident.

Goodale said that isn’t expected for another two months.

“There is a negotiatin­g process that has yet to take place.”

RALPH GOODALE EX-PUBLIC SAFETY MINISTER

 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Babak Razzaghi and his sister Banafsheh Razzaghi mourn the loss of their sister Niloofar Razzaghi, brother-in-law Ardalan Hamidi and nephew Kamyar Hamidi, who died in a Ukraine airplane crash last January.
DARRYL DYCK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Babak Razzaghi and his sister Banafsheh Razzaghi mourn the loss of their sister Niloofar Razzaghi, brother-in-law Ardalan Hamidi and nephew Kamyar Hamidi, who died in a Ukraine airplane crash last January.

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