The Borneo Post

Plane ‘turned back’ before Iran crash

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TEHRAN: Iranian authoritie­s have said a Ukrainian airliner, which crashed outside Tehran with the loss of all 176 people on board, turned back a er suffering a problem, as Ukrainian experts joined the investigat­ion Thursday.

Both Canada and the US called for a full investigat­ion to determine the cause of Wednesday’s crash, which came shortly a er Tehran launched missiles at US troops in Iraq in response to the killing of a top Iranian general in a US drone strike in Baghdad.

There was no immediate indication that foul play may have caused the Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines (UIA) plane to go down soon a er takeoff, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned against speculatin­g on the crash causes.

“The plane, which was initially headed west to leave the airport zone, turned right following a problem and was headed back to the airport at the moment of the crash,” the Iranian Civil Aviation Organisati­on said on its website.

“The plane disappeare­d from radar screens the moment it reached 2,400 metres. The pilot sent no radio message about the unusual circumstan­ces.

“According to eyewitness­es, a fire was seen on board the plane which grew in intensity,” the organisati­on added, reporting the first findings of its investigat­ion into the crash.

The organisati­on said it had questioned witnesses both on the ground and on board a second aircraft which was flying above the Ukrainian Boeing 737 as the disaster unfolded.

Heartbreak­ing details started emerging about the victims, most of them from Iran and Canada.

Body bags were lined up on the ground, and the passengers’ personal items — including luggage, clothes, a Santa Claus doll and a boxing glove — were scattered in the debris.

According to Ukraine, 82 Iranians, 63 Canadians, 10 Swedes, four Afghans, three Germans and three Britons were on board, as well as 11 Ukrainians — including nine crew.

About 30 came from the Iranian community around Edmonton, capital of Alberta province in western Canada, where resident

Payman Parseyan described the tragedy as ‘devastatin­g’.

“Every one of our community members was touched in one way or another,” Parseyan told Canada’s national broadcaste­r CBC.

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei offered his ‘ sincere condolence­s’ to the bereaved families.

Iran’s civil aviation chief, Ali Abedzadeh, said Iran would cooperate with Ukraine, but not send the black boxes to the US, with which it has had no diplomatic relations for four decades.

Without naming Iran directly,

The plane disappeare­d from radar screens the moment it reached 2,400 metres. The pilot sent no radio message about the unusual circumstan­ces. According to eyewitness­es, a fire was seen on board the plane which grew in intensity.

Iranian Civil Aviation Organisati­on

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued a statement calling for ‘complete cooperatio­n with any investigat­ion into the cause of the crash’.

According to aviation experts, only a handful of countries are capable of analysing black boxes — notably Britain, France, Germany and the US.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government would ensure a ‘thorough investigat­ion’ and that “Canadians’ questions are answered”.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Photo shows rescue teams working at the scene of a Ukrainian airliner that crashed shortly a er take-off near Imam Khomeini airport in Tehran.
— AFP photo Photo shows rescue teams working at the scene of a Ukrainian airliner that crashed shortly a er take-off near Imam Khomeini airport in Tehran.
 ??  ?? A woman places flowers at a memorial for the victims of the Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Boeing 737-800 crash at the Boryspil airport outside Kiev.
A woman places flowers at a memorial for the victims of the Ukraine Internatio­nal Airlines Boeing 737-800 crash at the Boryspil airport outside Kiev.

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