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Iran Lacks Equipment to Analyse Downed Boeing's Recorders - Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau

© Iranian Red Crescent Society / Go to the mediabankIran Ukraine Plane Crash
Iran Ukraine Plane Crash - Sputnik International
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Ukraine International Airlines’ Kiev-bound Boeing 737-800 crashed on 8 January, soon after departing from Iran’s Imam Khomeini Airport. Citizens of Iran, Canada, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Germany, Sweden and the United Kingdom were among the 176 passengers and crew who were killed.

Canada wants black box data from the downed Ukrainian Boeing to be analysed immediately, the country's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said. 

He added that there is not the right kind of equipment to do that in Iran.

Mr Trudeau also said that the fact that Iran does not recognise dual nationality of crash victims is a challenge, adding that Canada insists that the families' wishes be respected.

Earlier this week, Iranian Foreign Ministry's spokesman Abbas Mousavi said: "We have informed Canada that Tehran considers dual nationals who were killed in the plane crash as Iranian citizens..." Prior to that, Canadian Foreign Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne dismissed the Iranian position on dual nationality as "nonsense."   

© AP Photo / Ebrahim NorooziPeople gather for a candlelight vigil to remember the victims of the Ukraine plane crash, at the gate of Amri Kabir University that some of the victims of the crash were former students of, in Tehran, Iran, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2020. Iran on Saturday, Jan. 11, acknowledged that its armed forces "unintentionally" shot down the Ukrainian jetliner that crashed earlier this week, killing all 176 aboard, after the government had repeatedly denied Western accusations that it was responsible.
Iran Lacks Equipment to Analyse Downed Boeing's Recorders - Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau - Sputnik International
People gather for a candlelight vigil to remember the victims of the Ukraine plane crash, at the gate of Amri Kabir University that some of the victims of the crash were former students of, in Tehran, Iran, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2020. Iran on Saturday, Jan. 11, acknowledged that its armed forces "unintentionally" shot down the Ukrainian jetliner that crashed earlier this week, killing all 176 aboard, after the government had repeatedly denied Western accusations that it was responsible.

Ukraine International Airlines’ Kiev-bound Boeing 737-800 crashed on 8 January, soon after departing from Iran’s Imam Khomeini Airport. All 176 passengers and crew were killed, among them were citizens of Iran, Canada, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Germany, Sweden and the United Kingdom. 

A couple of days later, the Iranian military admitted to unintentionally shooting down the plane, having confused it with a hostile cruise missile in anticipation of US retaliation to Iran's missile attack on Iraqi bases housing US troops. A new escalation in US-Iran tensions occurred after the killing of Iranian top military commander Qasem Soleimani in a US drone strike in Baghdad on 3 January. 

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