Times Colonist

Recorders from downed aircraft still in Iran

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — Canada and four other countries are still trying to pressure Iran to release the flight recorders from its Jan. 8 shooting down of a Ukrainian passenger plane, Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Friday.

On March 11, Garneau was at the Montreal meeting of the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on when Iran’s representa­tive promised his government would surrender the so-called black boxes to Ukrainian authoritie­s by March 25. That has not happened. “The boxes are still in Iran and we continue to exert pressure,” Garneau said Friday at a government briefing on a video link.

“They said it would be within two weeks. That coincided with the serious onset of COVID-19 in Iran. And they explained that they were not in a position to address that matter at that time.”

Iran’s ICAO representa­tive, Farhad Parvaresh, was not at the Montreal meeting but he made the promise over the telephone.

The pandemic has ravaged Iran, but the regime must still surrender the flight recorders to honour its obligation­s under internatio­nal civil aviation law, Garneau said.

“We continue now to exert pressure on Iran to transfer those boxes in accordance with their obligation­s,” he said.

Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight 752 was hit by two Iranian missiles shortly after takeoff from the Tehran airport, killing all 176 on board, including 55 Canadian citizens and 30 permanent residents.

Dozens more passengers were also bound for Canada, many of them students and academics returning from a winter break.

The Tehran-Kyiv flight was a popular first leg for trips from Iran to Canada.

Britain, Ukraine, Afghanista­n and Sweden also lost citizens when the plane was destroyed.

Those countries have formed an alliance with Canada to deal with Iran.

They are pressing Iran to co-operate in a transparen­t investigat­ion so the cause of the missile strike and the crash can be determined and compensati­on for the victims’ families can be paid.

Iran initially covered up the cause of the crash, but was forced to admit that its Revolution­ary Guard fired two missiles at the plane.

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