Lethbridge Herald

Investigat­ion begins into crash

UKRAINIAN JET CRASH KILLS 176, SETS OFF MOURNING IN CANADA

- David Koenig and Jon Gambrell THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The crash of a Ukrainian jetliner that killed 176 people in Iran touched off mourning Wednesday in both Ukraine and Canada — where many of the victims were from or were headed — and raised a host of questions about what went wrong. But U.S. intelligen­ce officials said there was no immediate evidence it was shot down.

The jetliner, a Boeing 737 operated by Ukrainian Internatio­nal Airlines, went down on the outskirts of Tehran during takeoff just hours after Iran launched a barrage of missiles at U.S. forces. While the timing of the disaster led some aviation experts to wonder whether it was brought down by a missile, Iranian officials disputed any such suggestion and blamed mechanical trouble.

“The rumours about the plane are completely false and no military or political expert has confirmed it,” Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi, spokesman for the Iranian armed forces, was quoted by the semioffici­al Fars news agency as saying. He said the rumours were “psychologi­cal warfare” by the government’s opponents.

In Washington, a Democrat who attended a classified briefing from Trump administra­tion officials on

Capitol Hill — including Defence Secretary Mark Esper, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and CIA Director Gina Haspel — said the briefers had no intelligen­ce indicating the plane was shot down. The lawmaker spoke on condition of anonymity.

The plane, en route to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, was carrying 167 passengers and nine crew members from several countries, including 82 Iranians, at least 63 Canadians and 11 Ukrainians, according to officials. The crash just before dawn scattered flaming debris and passengers’ belongings across a wide stretch of farmland.

Many of the passengers were believed to be internatio­nal students attending universiti­es in Canada; they were making their way back to Toronto by way of Kyiv after visiting with family during the winter break.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said 138 of the passengers were bound for Canada. The flight also included a family of four and newlyweds, too. The manifest listed several teenagers and children, some as young as one or two.

The crash ranked among the worst losses of life for Canadians in an aviation disaster. The flag over Parliament in Ottawa was lowered to half-staff, and Trudeau vowed to get to the bottom of the disaster.

“Know that all Canadians are grieving with you,” he said, addressing the victims’ families.

Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy cut short a visit to Oman to return to Kyiv and said a team of Ukrainian experts would go to Tehran to help investigat­e the crash.

“Our priority is to find the truth and everyone responsibl­e for the tragedy,” he wrote in a Facebook statement.

Ukrainian officials, for their part, initially agreed that the 3 1/2-year-old plane was brought down by mechanical trouble but later backed away from that and declined to offer a cause while the investigat­ion is going on.

While the cause of the tragedy remained unknown, the disaster could further damage Boeing’s reputation, which has been battered by the furor over two deadly crashes involving a different model of the Boeing jet, the muchnewer 737 Max, which has been grounded for nearly 10 months. The uproar led to the firing of the company’s CEO last month.

Boeing extended condolence­s to the victims’ families and said it stands ready to assist.

Authoritie­s said they found the plane’s socalled black boxes, which record cockpit conversati­ons and instrument data.

But given the near state of war between Iran and the U.S., it was not immediatel­y clear whether the Iranians would share the devices with investigat­ors from the United States and its allies or whether Tehran would invite the U.S. National Transporta­tion Safety Board to take part.

Normally investigat­ors from the country of the plane’s origin — in this case, the U.S. — participat­e in the investigat­ion of major crashes in other nations.

Immediatel­y after the crash Qassem Biniaz, a spokesman for Iran’s Road and Transporta­tion Ministry, said it appeared a fire erupted in one of its engines and the pilot lost control of the plane, according to the state-run IRNA news agency. The news report did not explain how Iranian authoritie­s knew that.

Major world airlines, meanwhile, rerouted flights crossing the Middle East to avoid danger amid escalating tensions between the U.S. and Iran, and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion barred American flights from certain Persian Gulf airspace, warning of the “potential for miscalcula­tion or misidentif­ication” of civilian aircraft.

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