Saturday, May 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada forms own team to investigate PS752 crash

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Oct, 2020 10:09 PM
  • Canada forms own team to investigate PS752 crash

Foreign Affairs Minister François-Philippe Champagne says Canada will have its own forensics team examine the evidence on the crash of Ukraine International Airlines Flight PS752.

Iran admits an air-defence battery shot the airliner down near Tehran in January, blaming human error.

Champagne says the Canadian team will be led by a former deputy director of operations at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and will have members from several federal departments.

Canadian experts have been present as observers in the probe of the crash being carried out under international air travel rules, but can play only a very limited role.

Fifty-five Canadians and 30 permanent residents were among the 176 people killed in the crash, with many more of the passengers bound for Canada as well.

The route from Tehran to Kyiv, Ukraine, was a popular first leg of the voyage from Iran to Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

Tories ask speaking agency to deliver WE docs

Tories ask speaking agency to deliver WE docs
The federal Conservatives are calling on a speaking agency through which WE Charity paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to members of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's family to hand over all documents about the arrangements.

Tories ask speaking agency to deliver WE docs

Macklem to central bankers: Speak simply

Macklem to central bankers: Speak simply
The head of the Bank of Canada made an international pitch to his fellow central bankers on Thursday to forge closer ties with average citizens to manage economic expectations through the pandemic, or risk losing public trust and face an existential crisis.

Macklem to central bankers: Speak simply

Elections Canada braces for pandemic vote

Elections Canada braces for pandemic vote
Elections Canada is bracing for an explosive increase in the number of Canadians who vote by mail should the country be plunged into an election during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Elections Canada braces for pandemic vote

Back-to-school day for many Quebec students

Back-to-school day for many Quebec students
There was a mixture of anxiety and regular back-to-school excitement this morning as tens of thousands of Montreal-area children returned to class for the first time since the emergence of COVID-19.

Back-to-school day for many Quebec students

Alberta expects deficit of more than $24B

Alberta expects deficit of more than $24B
The double blow of collapsing oil prices and the COVID-19 crisis has pushed Alberta into a historic deficit of $24.2 billion — more than triple what the United Conservative government projected in its February budget.

Alberta expects deficit of more than $24B

Spike in requests for mail-in ballots in N.B

Spike in requests for mail-in ballots in N.B
New Brunswick's chief electoral officer says there's been a spike in requests for mail-in ballots as voters prepare to choose their next provincial government in the first election in Canada called during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Spike in requests for mail-in ballots in N.B