Times Colonist

A portrait of the people on the flight

University students, professors, bankers, newlyweds and children among passengers on board ill-fated plane

- MORGAN LOWRIE

Newlyweds, a toddler and university students returning to their studies were among 138 people travelling to Canada who died Wednesday morning when a Ukrainian passenger plane crashed shortly after taking off from Iran’s capital, Tehran.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said 138 of the 176 passengers aboard the Kyiv-bound plane had connecting flights to Canada.

“A Ukrainian Airlines plane just landed in Toronto from Kyiv,” he said at a news conference Wednesday afternoon. “According to the airline, there were 138 passengers who weren’t on that flight.”

A portrait of the people who should have filled those seats began to emerge in the hours following the crash.

Universiti­es across Canada lowered flags to half-mast and began mourning faculty members and students, who featured heavily on a passenger list that included at least 63 Canadians.

The plane, fully loaded with fuel for its 2,300-kilometre flight, crashed in farmland near the town of Shahedshah­r on the outskirts of Tehran. Videos showed fires lighting up the darkened fields before dawn and rows of body bags laid out along the side of a road.

The plane had been delayed from taking off from Imam Khomeini Internatio­nal Airport by almost an hour. It never made it higher than 2,400 metres, data from the flight-tracking website FlightRada­r24 indicates.

Many of the victims were from Edmonton. Others were Torontoare­a profession­als and a family of three from Ajax, Ont. CIBC bank said Evin Arsalani, her husband Hiva and their one-year-old child all died in the crash.

More than a dozen students from Canadian universiti­es, as well as professors and alumni were confirmed among the crash victims.

University of Alberta president David Turpin said several of the school’s students were on the plane. “This is a devastatin­g loss for the University of Alberta,” he said. “Ours is a closely interconne­cted community, and we grieve with everyone touched by this terrible loss — friends, classmates, roommates, professors, students, mentors, and colleagues.”

Payman Paseyan, a member of the Iranian-Canadian community in Edmonton, said his friend Pedram Mousavi died along with his wife, Mojgan Daneshmand, and their daughters, Daria Mousavi and Dorina Mousavi. The parents were engineerin­g professors at the University of Alberta.

“They had two young girls with them. I can’t imagine what was going through their mind,” said Paseyan.

Hossein Saghlitooi­n, who did his PhD and post-doctorate under Mousavi, said he has known the family for about six years.

“I was crying my eyes out. I am not an emotional person, but I know them so much,” he said.

“It’s not just that I was working with them or that he was my boss, he was a friend. He was like a father to me.”

Saghlitooi­n said it took him several hours to confirm the informatio­n, and then he had to tell his colleagues one by one.

“Both of them were amazing, sweet people — they were so kind, irreplacea­ble,” he said.

The University of Toronto confirmed six of its students appeared on the passenger manifest, while the University of Windsor said at least five names on the list were members of its student or research community.

The Boeing 737-800 was en route to Ukraine’s capital when it went down.

Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Vadym Prystaiko said the plane was carrying 63 Canadians, 82 Iranians, 11 Ukrainian passengers and crew, 10 Swedes, four Afghans, three Germans and three Britons. However, the final tally of Canadians could change as more informatio­n becomes available about those holding dual citizenshi­p, Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said.

Trudeau promised the crash would be thoroughly investigat­ed, adding that Champagne would be speaking with Iran’s foreign minister.

Both Trudeau and Transport Minister Marc Garneau said it was too early to speculate on what caused the crash. Garneau said satellite data appeared to show the plane taking off normally, but it’s clear that something “very unusual” happened shortly after.

“We cannot speculate at this point, there are a number of possibilit­ies, and we will have to wait to obtain more informatio­n,” Garneau said. While university students featured prominentl­y in the plane’s passenger list, those reported dead hailed from all walks of life.

They included a dentist who worked in Aurora, Ont., and her daughter, an employee of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation and a high school student.

Northern Secondary School in Toronto held a moment of silence after announcing Grade 10 student Maya Zibaie was among those on board.

Some of those on the plane were newlyweds, returning from their weddings.

They included Siavash Ghafouri-Azar and Sara Mamani, Montreal-area residents and graduates of Concordia University’s mechanical engineerin­g program. Gounash Pirniya, a close friend, said the couple had just got married in Iran and had recently bought a house together.

“They were successful, kind, honest and hardworkin­g people,” Pirniya said. “They were enjoying their life as Canadian citizens.”

Fareed Arasteh, who was studying biology at Ottawa’s Carleton University, had also just got married on Sunday, a family member confirmed.

Shayesteh Majdnia, a past president of the Iranian Heritage Society of Edmonton, said she was close friends with Shekoufeh Choupannej­ad, a gynecologi­st who died along with her two daughters, Saba Saadat and Sara Saadat.

Majdnia said she had spoken to Choupannej­ad’s husband, who is still in Iran, for confirmati­on.

“She was the kindest person I had ever met,” said Majdnia, speaking about Choupannej­ad.

As of Wednesday afternoon, several other Canadian schools were going through the heartbreak­ing task of determinin­g whether any of their students were aboard the plane.

The University of Victoria, Western University, Carleton, York, Waterloo, the University of British Columbia, the University of Manitoba, Dalhousie University in Halifax and Montreal’s Concordia University and École de Technologi­e Superiéure all confirmed students, alumni or faculty were among the dead.

The University of Guelph identified two victims as Ghanimat Azdahri, a PhD student in the department of geography, environmen­t and geomatics, and Milad Ghasemi Ariani, a PhD student in marketing and consumer studies.

The crash comes in a region where tensions have been running high following the American assassinat­ion of a top Iranian general near Baghdad and retaliator­y missile attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq. Ukrainian authoritie­s initially said it appeared mechanical failure was to blame for the crash, but later walked that back, saying nothing has been ruled out.

Global Affairs Canada warned against any non-essential travel to Iran “due to the volatile security situation, the regional threat of terrorism and the risk of arbitrary detention.”

The agency said Canadians, particular­ly those holding dual Canadian-Iranian citizenshi­p, were at risk of being arbitraril­y questioned, arrested and detained.

 ??  ?? Rescue workers search the area on Wednesday where a Ukrainian plane crashed southwest of the Iranian capital, Tehran.
Rescue workers search the area on Wednesday where a Ukrainian plane crashed southwest of the Iranian capital, Tehran.
 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Justin Trudeau at a news conference in Ottawa on Wednesday. The prime minister said it was too early to speculate on what caused the crash.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Justin Trudeau at a news conference in Ottawa on Wednesday. The prime minister said it was too early to speculate on what caused the crash.
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