Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Iran Must Compensate Crash Victims Families, Canada-Led Group Agrees

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2020 08:15 PM

    LONDON - Canada and its allies sent a stern message to Iran on Thursday: get ready to pay the victims of the Ukrainian airliner it shot down, and don't try to block any meaningful criminal prosecution of those responsible.

     

    Those demands were among the five elements in the agreement that emerged from the meeting Canada hosted in London Thursday with representatives from Britain, Sweden, Afghanistan and Ukraine — countries that lost citizens in the crash of Ukraine International Airlines flight PS752.

     

    "We are judging Iran every day, demand by demand," Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said after the closed-door meeting of ministers.

     

    The newly formed group of Iran watchers will have to remain vigilant for months, if not years, Champagne said.

     

    That was underscored by the presence of Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Blok. He joined talks to provide a briefing the experience of the Netherlands in leading its five-year-long probe of the deadly shootdown of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over Ukraine, which investigators have blamed on Russia.

     

    The countries expect Iran to deal with them on providing compensation to the families of victims, and ensuring a transparent investigation into the downing of the aircraft.

     

    "The international community is watching. I think that we took as a first positive step the fact that Iran admitted full responsibility," Champagne said.

     

    "From that admission, obviously, flows consequences and we expect and demand a full co-operation from the Iranian authorities in every step of consular services, identification of remains, investigation and prosecution of those responsible."

     

    The group also called on Iran to respect families' wishes on repatriating the remains of the 176 people killed when the plane came down, full access for consular officials and investigators, and an independent and credible criminal investigation into last week's crash.

     

    Everyone on board was killed when one, though perhaps two, Iranian surface-to-air missiles hit the Ukrainian airliner. Iran lost 82 nationals in the crash, while 57 Canadians were killed. The Canadian Press has independently confirmed at least 89 victims with ties to Canada, many of them students and professors returning after spending the December break visiting relatives in Iran.

     

    After denying for days that it shot down the passenger plane, Iran's leaders apologized and admitted what they said was a mistake.

     

    On Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's parliamentary secretary, Omar Alghabra, said the federal government was exploring options for compensating victims' families in the interim because the international process could drag on for years.

     

    The gathering at Canada House on London's Trafalgar Square opened with a solemn, wordless ceremony.

     

    Champagne led the four ministers down a grand staircase, past flags from their countries to a podium where each lit one candle in quiet succession. The ministers then stood shoulder to shoulder behind the flickering flames to lead a moment of silence.

     

    The meeting in London began with a political update about the situation in Iran and the tensions in the region that led up to the crash. That was followed by an intelligence briefing from Ukrainian Foreign Affairs Minister Vadym Prystaiko as his country has had investigators in Iran for a week.

     

    Trudeau has been working the phones with his international counterparts in recent days, including with United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres and the leaders of Afghanistan, the United Arab Emirates and Jordan.

     

    "The Prime Minister and the Secretary General reaffirmed the need for a complete and thorough international investigation. They welcomed the involvement of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in the investigation," said a readout of Trudeau's call with Guterres.

     

    ICAO is based in Montreal.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Law Protecting Whistleblowers Now In Force

    New Law Protecting Whistleblowers Now In Force
    Current and past government employees who bring forward concerns about serious wrongdoing or who come under investigation have more protection, as the Public Interest Disclosure Act (PIDA) comes into force.

    New Law Protecting Whistleblowers Now In Force

    One Student In Critical Condition After School Bus Crash In Northern Alberta

    One Student In Critical Condition After School Bus Crash In Northern Alberta
    More than a dozen students were sent to hospital, one in critical condition, after a school bus and a truck-mounted crane collided on an Alberta highway.

    One Student In Critical Condition After School Bus Crash In Northern Alberta

    Search For Anti-Nuke Greta Unfolds Amid Calls For Canada To Push Nato On Bombs

    Ask Hugo Slim about teenaged climate change activist Greta Thunberg, and one thought comes to mind: if only there were a young person like her who was that worried about nuclear weapons.    

    Search For Anti-Nuke Greta Unfolds Amid Calls For Canada To Push Nato On Bombs

    Alberta University Students Want Lecturer Who Denies Ukrainian Famine Fired

    Some University of Alberta students want the school to fire an assistant lecturer who denies the Holodomor, the mass genocide of Ukrainian people carried out by the former Soviet Union in the early 1930s.    

    Alberta University Students Want Lecturer Who Denies Ukrainian Famine Fired

    Trudeau To Mark NATO's Birthday Amid Questions About Military Alliance's Future

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is off to London where he will spend the next few days trying to give the NATO military alliance a boost amid existential questions about its future — while defending Canada's own commitment to it.

    Trudeau To Mark NATO's Birthday Amid Questions About Military Alliance's Future

    Only Liberal Riding East Of Montreal Up For Grabs In Quebec City Byelection

    Only Liberal Riding East Of Montreal Up For Grabs In Quebec City Byelection
    QUEBEC - Voters head to the polls today in a Quebec City riding that could be in play after being a Liberal stronghold for more than 50 years.

    Only Liberal Riding East Of Montreal Up For Grabs In Quebec City Byelection