National Post (National Edition)

Montreal pair among dead and missing

- MORGAN LOWRIE

MONTREAL • A pair of young Montreal women vacationin­g together have been identified as being among the dead and missing following the collapse of a condo building near Miami last month.

Accenture, a multinatio­nal consulting company with a Montreal office, said Tuesday in a statement that it is grieving the loss of its employee Michelle Pazos, as well as her father.

The 23-year-old Pazos was visiting her father's Surfside, Fla., condo along with her friend Anastasia Gromova, who remains missing following the tragedy.

Miami-Dade police have confirmed that they pulled Pazos's body from the rubble of the collapsed building on July 9, while that of 55-yearold Miguel Pazos was found a day earlier.

Gromova's mother, Larysa Gromova, confirmed in a written message that her daughter is one of the four Canadians reported missing after the collapse.

Local authoritie­s say at least 97 people died from the June 24 collapse, and as of Monday, 95 of those victims had been identified.

A LinkedIn profile associated with the name Michelle Pazos suggests she studied marketing management at McGill University before going on to work in Accenture's Montreal's office.

“We grieve deeply for the loss of Michelle and her father and our hearts go out to everyone affected by this tragedy,” the company said in an email.

Gromova's mother, who flew to Florida from Canada after the collapse, described the wait for answers as “terrible” and “painful.”

“It's too much, it's taking too long,” she told The Associated Press Monday.

Gromova said her daughter had been visiting Pazos in Florida before leaving to teach English in Japan.

“She went on a two-week vacation. She was a young girl. She had all her life in front of her,” the grieving mother said.

“Such a sudden thing, so many buildings in Miami. It had to be hers for the one week she was here.”

Global Affairs Canada confirmed the remains of three Canadians have been found at the building collapse site, and that one person remains unaccounte­d for.

It did not name the deceased, but said it was providing consular assistance to the families.

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