Ottawa Citizen

Medic was ‘exceptiona­l girl, full of life’

Officer killed in skydiving accident mourned as ‘exceptiona­l girl full of life’

- AEDAN HELMER She was always smiling, always happy, and the happiness she exuded made others around her happy as well. ahelmer@postmedia.com Twitter.com/ helmera

Betiana “Betty” Mubili was on her way to becoming a commission­ed officer with the Canadian Forces when she was killed in a skydiving mishap, her broken-hearted father says.

Viktor Mubili said he’s been fielding phone calls and messages of condolence­s “left, right and centre” since police confirmed his 29-year-old daughter Betty was killed Sunday after her parachute malfunctio­ned during a solo recreation­al jump near Petawawa.

According to her father, Betty Mubili had already packed her belongings and was preparing to move back to Toronto, where the family first settled after moving to Canada from Zambia in the early 2000s.

Betty enlisted in the Canadian Forces right out of high school in 2006, training first at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown before transferri­ng to Edmonton and later Petawawa, where she had been stationed for just under a year before Sunday’s skydiving incident.

She trained as a medic, and served a yearlong tour in Afghanista­n, where she attained the rank of master corporal.

“She always wanted to help people,” said Viktor Mubili, who said he came from a military background in his native Zambia. “She was supposed to move back to Toronto this month to start her training. She was going to be a lieutenant. But now that will never be.”

Mubili said he was overwhelme­d by the outpouring of condolence­s.

More than 100 mourners showed up at the family’s old neighbourh­ood church in Mississaug­a on Monday, where Betty “never missed a day at church,” her father said, to express their grief, share memories and offer prayers.

“She was everyone’s friend,” Mubili said.

“She was always smiling, always happy, and the happiness she exuded made others around her happy as well.”

Mubili said funeral services will likely be held in Toronto on the weekend, though plans have not yet been finalized.

“I’m at a loss for words,” said Mubili’s cousin, Iqbal Geloo.

“One thing I can tell you is that this was an exceptiona­l girl full of life … She served in Afghanista­n and that inspired us all to pursue careers. She excelled in her career. Until this untimely death.”

She leaves behind a young brother Issa “and a whole lot” of grieving cousins and nephews,” said Geloo. “Gone but never forgotten.”

Garrison Petawawa public affairs officer Daphny Gebhart-Turcotte confirmed Mubili served as a medic and was recently promoted from master corporal to officer cadet, and said she was about to pursue her nursing training in Toronto.

Viktor Mubili confirmed a video clip posted to YouTube on July 31 shows his daughter completing her first skydive, a tandem jump from 10,000 feet with Skydive Petawawa.

Police declined to name the skydiving company involved in Sunday’s fatal incident, though OPP Const. Shawn Peever confirmed Mubili had signed up for the jump with a “private recreation­al skydive company that was local (to Petawawa).”

The area where Mubili crashed, in a field near Black Bay Road, is several hundred metres from the “drop zone” for Skydive Petawawa, the area’s only local recreation­al skydiving company.

Skydive Petawawa did not return messages left by phone and email Monday, and attempts to reach company owner J.P. Marcoux were unsuccessf­ul.

According to informatio­n on the Skydive Petawawa website, the company performs tandem jumps from a Cessna at 10,000 feet altitude.

People attain an average speed of 195 km/h during the “free fall” portion of the jump, according to the company website, which also provides a section under the heading, “What if the parachute malfunctio­ns?”

“Skydiving parachute systems are equipped with a series of back ups that include a reserve parachute and an automatic activation device.

“This, combined with the knowledge base of your instructor and the training you receive if you are a First Jump Course student, provides solutions to most problems that are commonly encountere­d.

“That being said, we acknowledg­e there is inherent risk in everything we do in this world and that there is no perfect system. Our priority is the safety of all our jumpers.”

OPP said their investigat­ion will include an examinatio­n of the equipment she was using. Police have spoken to witnesses but want to talk to anyone with informatio­n.

 ??  ?? Canadian Forces member Betiana Mubili, 29, who died Sunday in a skydiving accident, was about to pursue nursing training in Toronto.
Canadian Forces member Betiana Mubili, 29, who died Sunday in a skydiving accident, was about to pursue nursing training in Toronto.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada