Lethbridge Herald

Mourners reel as questions surround crash

QUESTIONS BEHIND CAUSE OF PLANE CRASH STIR FEAR, CONFUSION AMONG MOURNERS

- Paola Loriggio THE CANADIAN PRESS

Mounting questions surroundin­g the circumstan­ces of a plane crash outside Tehran that left no survivors fuelled confusion, fear and anger Thursday among those grieving the deaths of dozens of passengers bound for Canada.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said intelligen­ce from multiple sources indicates the Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines flight was downed by an Iranian surface-to-air missile, echoing statements from Ukrainian officials and U.S. President Donald Trump earlier in the day. Both Trudeau and Trump said the strike might have been unintentio­nal.

The prime minister has said 138 of the 176 passengers aboard the Kyivbound plane that crashed Wednesday morning, local time, had a connecting flight to Canada, and the identities of the dead were slowly coming to light through relatives, friends and employers.

When Hassan Shadkhoo learned his wife Sheyda Shadkoo, 41, had died in the crash, he flew to Istanbul overnight in the hopes of making his way to Tehran. He was still in Turkey waiting to board a plane as Trudeau spoke of Iran’s possible involvemen­t in the incident.

“It was no accident, no accident,” he said through heavy tears after hearing the news. “These are acts of terrorism. My wife was murdered.”

Nina Saeidpour, a Calgary real estate agent whose friend, Kasra Saati, was among the victims, said the latest developmen­ts made the loss even harder to bear.

“If something like this happened as an accident, it’s much easier to take in than when you hear that maybe it got shot,” she said Thursday afternoon.

“It makes it much harder for people to take in and everybody right now in the community is in shock and sad and of course they’re really mad if something like this happened not as an accident. We’re just trying to figure out what happened.”

Bijan Ahmadi, an Iranian-Canadian in Toronto and the executive director of the not-for-profit organizati­on Peace and Diplomacy, said the community needs answers, particular­ly in light of the claims of an Iranian missile strike.

“I’m speechless to explain that,” he said. “If that is the case, it will be very difficult for Iranian people to absorb that, to accept that. The impact is huge.”

Confusion surroundin­g the cause of the crash, combined with concern over the escalating political conflict, could deter some Iranian-Canadians from visiting relatives back home, said Majid Zohari, another IranianCan­adian living in the Toronto area.

“Every single Iranian I know personally has some ties to Iran — to the community, not the regime. So this is a story that unfortunat­ely has a huge impact on everyone, directly or indirectly,” he said.

The list of confirmed victims, which included newlyweds, families and university students, continued to grow Thursday as more were identified by loved ones.

Hadis Hayatdavou­di, a student at Western University, was returning from a month-long visit with relatives in Iran — her first such trip since she moved to Canada in 2018 — when she died, her research supervisor said.

Jamie Noel said Hayatdavou­di was on flight 752 so she could be back in Canada in time to act as a teaching assistant for one of his courses.

“She found Canadians were very welcoming to her, coming from so far away, all by herself, a single woman in a strange country with a different language,” Noel said, noting that she quickly found community with the other Iranian students in his lab.

Montrealer Shahab Raana left behind a successful career in Iran to come to Canada for a better future, according to his close friend Hamidreza Zanedi.

Zanedi, who first met Raana about 15 years ago in Iran, said his friend posted a selfie from the plane on an Iranian messaging app just before takeoff. He said his friends in Iran have also been in touch with Raana’s family, who are in a “state of shock and sorrow.”

Zanedi said Raana was taking courses in Montreal to improve his language skills and gain Canadian work experience. He’d booked a trip back to Iran without telling his family because he wanted to surprise them, Zanedi said.

A public outpouring of grief continued in Canada with mourners across the country planning candleligh­t vigils and other events to honour the dead.

Vigils were scheduled Thursday evening on Parliament Hill, in Toronto’s north end and in Halifax. A memorial service was also planned today at the University of Windsor, which lost five members of its student and research community in the crash.

Hundreds gathered across the country on Wednesday night to mourn in the bitter cold in Edmonton and Toronto.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau holds a news conference updating the Iran plane crash in Ottawa on Thursday as Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan looks on.
Canadian Press photo Prime Minister Justin Trudeau holds a news conference updating the Iran plane crash in Ottawa on Thursday as Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan looks on.
 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Mourners place candles and photograph­s during a vigil for those who were among the 176 people who were killed when Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight PS752 crashed after takeoff near Tehran, Iran, outside the Alberta Legislatur­e Building in Edmonton on Wednesday.
Canadian Press photo Mourners place candles and photograph­s during a vigil for those who were among the 176 people who were killed when Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight PS752 crashed after takeoff near Tehran, Iran, outside the Alberta Legislatur­e Building in Edmonton on Wednesday.

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