The Hamilton Spectator

PM says missile took down Ukrainian airliner over Tehran

- BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH AND ALEX BALLINGALL

OTTAWA—New intelligen­ce indicates the plane that crashed in Tehran this week, killing 63 Canadians, was shot down by an Iranian missile, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau revealed Thursday.

“The news will undoubtedl­y come as a further shock to the families that are already grieving,” Trudeau said, speaking to reporters for the second time in two days near Parliament Hill.

The prime minister said the intelligen­ce suggesting a “surface-to-air missile” caused the plane crash comes from Canadian per

“Canadians have questions and they deserve answers.” JUSTIN TRUDEAU PRIME MINISTER

sonnel as well as from allies.

“This may well have been unintentio­nal,” Trudeau said, repeating his call to Iranian authoritie­s to allow Canadian authoritie­s to take part in the investigat­ion into the cause of the plane crash.

“Canadians have questions and they deserve answers,” Trudeau said.

Trudeau declined to disclose further details, other than to say the intelligen­ce indicates that the crash was “likely” caused by a missile strike.

The Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines flight that crashed soon after takeoff from Tehran this week was on fire and appeared to be turning back to the airport before it hit the ground, according to a preliminar­y report, and Ukrainian officials are considerin­g the possibilit­y that the plane was downed by a hostile act.

The crew of Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Flight 752, bound for Kyiv, made no distress call before Iranian air traffic controller­s lost contact with the plane while it was still in the air, according to the report by Iran’s civil aviation organizati­on.

All 176 people on board the Boeing 737800 NG were killed in the crash, including 138 who were headed onward to Canada.

The abrupt loss of communicat­ions suggests something catastroph­ic and sudden happened to the aircraft.

“According to witnesses … a fire appeared on the aircraft which was intensifyi­ng, then impacted the ground causing an explosion,” the Iranian report said.

The jet was initially headed west “but turned right following a technical report and had a track showing returning to the airport,” the report said.

Earlier Thursday, U.S. President Donald Trump also raised the possibilit­y the plane was inadverten­tly brought down as he raised doubts that the crash was caused by a mechanical problem.

“Someone could have made a mistake on the other side … it has nothing to do with us,” Trump said Thursday. “It was flying in a pretty rough neighbourh­ood and somebody could have made a mistake.

“Some people say it’s mechanical. I personally don’t think that’s even a question personally,” he said.

Asked whether it may have been shot down by accident, Trump said, “I really don’t know.”

The preliminar­y report states that officials with the Transporta­tion Safety Board of Canada were notified about the accident under internatio­nal aviation protocols and suggested Canada would have a role to play in the probe. “The investigat­ion team would like to invite all the states involved in the accident to participat­e in the investigat­ion process,” the report stated.

Ukraine’s national security and defence council chief, Oleksiy Danilov, said several scenarios are being considered, including the possibilit­y that the plane was struck by an anti-aircraft missile.

Other theories include a collision with a drone “or other flying object,” an explosive failure of an engine and an explosion inside the plane “as a result of terrorist act,” Danilov said in a Facebook post.

The crash came soon after Iran had fired missiles at two Iraqi military bases housing U.S. and coalition troops, raising fears that a hostile act may have caused the crash of the Ukrainian jet.

Danilov said that the investigat­ion will include specialist­s who took part in the probe of the crash of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17, a Boeing 777 which was downed by a Russian missile as it flew through Ukrainian airspace in 2014.

Roland Paris, a former foreign policy adviser to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, said the speculatio­n about a hostile act underscore­s the need for a proper investigat­ion.

“We would really need to get the details on what were the circumstan­ces,” Paris said.

“It’s hard to imagine the Iranian government deliberate­ly shooting down a civilian plane full of Iranians. But all of this speaks to the importance of there being a thorough investigat­ion and of Canada playing a role in that investigat­ion.”

Paris added that it is still too early to speculate about any Canadian response given the lack of clarity about what happened.

“I would presume the United States was watching for missile launches very closely,” he said. “It seems a little bit premature because all of this stuff is speculativ­e.”

Meanwhile, Foreign Affairs Minister François-Philippe Champagne has spoken with Mohammad Javad Zarif, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iran, seeking Canadian participat­ion in the investigat­ion.

 ?? NARIMAN GHARIB ?? Still images from video provided to The New York Times appear to show a missile hitting a plane above Parand, near Tehran’s airport.
NARIMAN GHARIB Still images from video provided to The New York Times appear to show a missile hitting a plane above Parand, near Tehran’s airport.
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