Dilemma of Ukrainian plane haunts mullah regime in Tehran
The mullah regime in Tehran is suffering from the consequences of the attack that targeted a Ukrainian airliner a year ago, which the Revolutionary Guard militia has admitted responsibility for, as Canada has reaffirmed its determination to know the circumstances of the crash of the Boeing 737, which was shot down by a missile in Iran.
Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister François-Philippe
Champagne and Transport and Transport Minister Marc Garneau said in a joint
statement, “A year ago, on January 8, 2020, the crash of Ukraine Airlines
Flight 752 cost the lives of 176 people, including 55 Canadian citizens and 30
permanent residents of Canada, and many other passengers with links to Canada.”
They reassured the families of the victims, “On this date,
we meet and cry and affirm our determination to help the families of the
victims to obtain the answers they deserve.”
The two ministers expressed their deep solidarity with and
support for the afflicted families, stressing that the Canadian government will
continue to work with countries that have victims to hold Iran accountable and
to seek transparency and justice for the victims of this tragedy and their
families.
The families of the victims residing in Iran avoid talking
to the media for fear of censorship by the authorities in their country, while
other families abroad have renewed their refusal of the financial compensation
offered by Tehran to them, which is what Canada also did.
Canada, Britain, Ukraine and other countries involved in
this file rejected the Iranian government's decision to specify the
compensation owed to the families of the victims, stressing that such a
decision is not unique to Tehran, but rather is determined during negotiations
between the concerned countries.
The Iranian government approved last week an amount of
$150,000, or its equivalent in euros, for each victim of the ill-fated plane
that was shot down by the Revolutionary Guards' missiles.
Canadians who lost relatives organized a stop in the city of
Toronto in their efforts to find out what happened that day.
The memorial was held online and by physical attendance in
an open space, and the attendees raised pictures of the victims.
In Tehran, the military prosecutor, Gholam Abbas Torki, told
state television on Friday, January 8, that ten officers had been subject to
disciplinary measures, including dismissal or demotion, and that they would
appear for trial soon, but he did not announce a time frame.
The Revolutionary Guards stated that they shot down the
Ukrainian plane shortly after takeoff, thinking it was a missile in light of
the escalation of tension with the United States after Washington's
assassination of Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani on January 3, 2020.



