Newly weds, wedding party, students die in Iran plane crash

Edmonton - All passengers on board a Ukrainian plane died in the tragic crash on Wednesday, including many Iranians and Canadians.

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The plane crashed shortly after take-off from Tehran on Wednesday, killing all 179 people on board in a crash that intelligence sources said was likely caused by a technical malfunction. It had been heading for the Ukrainian capital Kiev.University of Alberta President David Turpin said at least 10 members of the university community had died, including students, faculty and alumni.“This is a grave loss,” he told reporters. “Words simply cannot express the grief that we are feeling on campus.”Among the victims was Mojgan Daneshmand, a professor of electrical engineering at the University of Alberta, “a brilliant, brilliant lady, very smart,” the Heritage Society’s Akbari said.Her husband, Pedram Mousavi, a professor of mechanical engineering at the same college, and the couple’s two daughters, also died in the crash.Mousavi was “like a father,” student Hossein Saghlatoon told Reuters.
The pair had traveled to Iran with daughters Daria and Dorina, aged 14 and 10, to visit elderly parents, Saghlatoon said.
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Arash Pourzarabi, 26, and Pouneh Gourji, 25, who were graduate students in computer science at the University of Alberta, had gone to Iran for their wedding, said Reza Akbari, president of the Iranian Heritage Society of Edmonton.They were on the plane with four members of their wedding party and another 24 Iranian-Canadians from Edmonton, Akbari said.“Oh God, I can’t believe this,” Akbari told Reuters. “It’s shocking to the whole community.”Borna Ghotbi, a close friend of the newlyweds since they were all undergraduates at Tehran’s Sharif University, said their wedding took place three days ago.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said 138 people on the plane were connecting to a flight to Canada.“All had so much potential, so much life ahead of them,” Trudeau told reporters, adding Canada expected to have a role in the crash investigation.Flags flew at half-mast across Canada, including at Parliament in Ottawa, and vigils were scheduled in several Canadian cities.The flight was a popular transit route for Canadians traveling to Iran, in the absence of direct flights, and carried many students and academics heading home from the holidays. Canada broke off diplomatic relations with Iran in 2012.
The Toronto District School Board said a number of students and their family members had been killed in the crash while the school board for York region, north of Toronto, said its schools had been “directly affected.”The disaster was the largest recent loss of life among Canadians since an Air India flight blew up in 1985 over the Atlantic Ocean, killing 268 Canadians.According to a 2016 census, around 210,000 of Canada’s 38 million inhabitants are of Iranian descent.
A victim of the Ukraine International Airlines crash in Iran, Dr. Parisa Eghbalian (L) poses with her husband Dr. Hamed Esmaeilion at their dentistry practice in Aurora, Ontario, Canada in an undated photo. Dr. Eghbalian died in the crash along with her daughter Reera Esmaeilion, 9. Her husband Dr. Esmaeilion is now enroute to Tehran.
A Canadian flag flies at half mast as the country mourns the loss of citizens in the Iran plane crash.
The Toronto District School Board said a number of students and their family members had been killed in the crash while the school board for York region, north of Toronto, said its schools had been “directly affected.”
“All had so much potential, so much life ahead of them,” Trudeau told reporters, adding Canada expected to have a role in the crash investigation.
Reuters

Published: Thu 9 Jan 2020, 6:36 AM

Last updated: Thu 9 Jan 2020, 5:05 PM

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