Canada says five missing in navy helicopter crash believed dead

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The crew of a C-148 Cyclone helicopter, attached to Royal Canadian Navy frigate HMCS Fredricton, which crashed in the Mediterranean Sea are seen in a combination of file photos released April 30, 2020.

Ottawa, Canada - The search-and-rescue mission undertaken on Wednesday has now officially been transformed into a recovery effort, the Canadian defence ministry said in a statement.

By AFP

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Published: Sat 2 May 2020, 4:03 AM

Last updated: Sat 2 May 2020, 7:00 AM

The five missing crew members of a Canadian navy helicopter that crashed during a NATO operation this week into the Mediterranean Sea are presumed dead, officials said Friday.
The search-and-rescue mission undertaken on Wednesday has now officially been transformed into a recovery effort, the Canadian defence ministry said in a statement.
So far, the body of one crew member from the Cyclone Sikorsky CH-148 helicopter, Sub-Lieutenant Abbigail Cowbrough, has been recovered and identified.
"The missing five members who were aboard the aircraft are now officially considered missing and presumed deceased," the statement said.
"Additional remains have been discovered during the search, but cannot be identified at this time."
The accident took place Wednesday -- the helicopter was headed back to the warship HMCS Fredericton after a training mission when contact was lost.
NATO ships and aircraft took part in the search and rescue mission, supported by Greece, Italy, Turkey and the United States.
"NATO allies will be continuing recovery efforts at the scene as HMCS Fredericton departs for port in Italy," the Canadian ministry said, adding that the warship would arrive in Italy on Saturday.
Canadian Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said the helicopter's cockpit voice and flight data recorders had been recovered and would be analysed in Canada.
The cause of the crash is so far "unknown," he said.
The Canadian frigate and submarine-hunting helicopter had been deployed since January 20 on NATO's Operation Reassurance, aimed at deterring Russia intervention in eastern and central Europe. 


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