Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Global Affairs Says One Canadian Among Four Killed In Float Plane Crash In Alaska

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 May, 2019 06:09 PM

    VANCOUVER — A Canadian killed Monday in a mid-air collision involving two sightseeing planes in Alaska is one of two people still missing, Princess Cruises says in a statement.


    The California-based company said Tuesday the Canadian and an Australian had not been located after their single-engine de Havilland DHC-2 Beaver collided with a float plane carrying 11 people near Ketchikan.


    Princess Cruises said rescue efforts were continuing for the unnamed Canadian and Australian, but Global Affairs Canada confirmed the Canadian was among those killed.


    The department said the name or hometown of the victim was not being released for privacy reasons.


    The United States Coast Guard had earlier said four bodies had been recovered — three from the smaller float plane and one from the larger plane — while 10 survivors were being treated for injuries at a hospital in Ketchikan.


    "One aircraft, operated by Taquan Air, was flying a shore excursion sold through Princess Cruises," the company statement said.


    "The flight was returning from a Misty Fjords tour carrying 10 guests from Royal Princess and a pilot. The second float plane involved was operating an independent flight tour carrying four additional guests from Royal Princess along with a pilot."


    The Royal Princess left Vancouver bound for Anchorage on Saturday and is scheduled to return to Vancouver on May 25.


    Princess Cruises spokesman Brian O'Conner said the company was extending its full support to investigating authorities as well as to the travelling companions of the guests involved.


    "We immediately activated our Princess Care Team employees in the region and sent additional team members to Ketchikan overnight to assist the families impacted," O'Connor said in the statement.


    The company also confirmed that the three victims recovered from the crashed Beaver, including the pilot, were U.S. citizens, as were all the passengers aboard the Taquan Air flight.


    It's not known how the planes collided. National Transportation Safety Board investigators were on their way from Washington, D.C., to the crash site.


    A safety board official said they were due to reach the scene at about midday Tuesday.


    Global Affairs Canada said in an email that Canadian consular officials in Seattle were in contact with local authorities to gather additional information and stood ready to provide assistance as required.


    "Our thoughts and sympathies are with the family and loved ones of the Canadian citizen who died in Alaska," the email said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Mother Found Guilty In Deaths Of Daughters To Appeal Verdict

    Quebec Mother Found Guilty In Deaths Of Daughters To Appeal Verdict
    MONTREAL — A Quebec mother convicted in the killings of her two young daughters will appeal the guilty verdicts.

    Quebec Mother Found Guilty In Deaths Of Daughters To Appeal Verdict

    Ontario Police Bust International Drug Ring, Seize 55 Kilos Of Cocaine

    Police in Ontario say they've busted an international cocaine smuggling operation with links to Mexico and the United States after a large drug seizure at the border.

    Ontario Police Bust International Drug Ring, Seize 55 Kilos Of Cocaine

    One Year Later: Survivors In Broncos Crash Continue To Heal From Injuries

    The 13 players who survived the Humboldt Broncos bus crash one year ago are dealing with injuries ranging from paralysis and back pain to brain damage and mental-health issues

    One Year Later: Survivors In Broncos Crash Continue To Heal From Injuries

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random
    Police say one man died at the scene and the second person died in hospital.

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random

    'We Are Hockey' Unveiled At Sikh Heritage Museum In Abbotsford

    This exhibit offers visitors a chance to see the pioneers of minorities in hockey as they follow the timeline to the present day where players of Punjabi descent and other minorities are starting to break through into the professional leagues. 

    'We Are Hockey' Unveiled At Sikh Heritage Museum In Abbotsford

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract
    Export Development Canada says it's reviewing support it gave to SNC-Lavalin after learning of an allegation the agency backed the company on a dam project in Angola that it won corruptly.  

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract