Iran to Send Black Boxes of Downed Ukrainian Plane to Ukraine

DUBAI (Reuters) —

People check the debris from a Ukraine International Airlines airplane which crashed after takeoff from Iran’s Imam Khomeini Airport, on the outskirts of Tehran, Iran, Jan. 8. (Nazanin Tabatabaee/WANA [West Asia News Agency] via Reuters)
Iran said on Saturday it was sending to Ukraine the black boxes from a Ukrainian passenger plane that the Iranian military shot down this month, an accident that sparked unrest at home and added to pressure on Tehran from abroad.

Iran‘s Tasnim news agency also reported the authorities were prepared for experts from France, Canada and the United States to examine information from the data and voice recorders of the Ukraine International Airlines plane that came down on Jan. 8.

It did not say when the black boxes would be sent to Ukraine.

The plane disaster, in which all 176 aboard were killed, has added to international pressure on Iran as it grapples with a long-running row with the United States over its nuclear program that briefly erupted into open conflict this month.

The plane was shot down in error at a time when Iran was on high alert for a U.S. attack. But the military took days to admit they had brought it down, a delay that sparked protests.

Hassan Rezaifar, a director in charge of accident investigations at Iran‘s Civil Aviation Organization, said the aim was to read the information on the recorders “with the use of the expertise of the countries of France, Canada and America.”

“If this effort is unsuccessful then the black boxes will be sent to France,” he said, according to Tasnim, adding that the black boxes were being sent to Kiev at the request of Ukrainian experts in Tehran and that they would not be inspected in Iran.

The U.S.-built Boeing 737-800 was en route from Tehran to the Ukrainian capital. Most of those on board were Iranians or dual nationals. Canada had 57 citizens on board.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has been pressing for a full investigation into the plane downing, said on Friday Iran should send the black boxes to France.

France was one of the few countries with the ability to read the flight and cockpit data recorders from the jet, he told a news conference, adding they were badly damaged.

Canada’s Foreign Ministry and the prime minister’s office had no immediate comment on the move to send the black boxes to Ukraine. The French Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment and a spokesman for France’s air accident agency, BEA, said it was awaiting an official request for assistance.

A spokesman for the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board also said it had no comment.

Ukraine has previously said it expected Iran to hand over the black boxes to Ukraine. The foreign minister also expects Iranian representatives to travel to Kiev next week.

Canada, alongside Ukraine, Sweden, Afghanistan and Britain, which also had citizens on the flight, have called for a thorough investigation and compensation for the families.

The plane was brought down in the tense hours after Iran launched missiles at U.S. targets in Iraq in response to the U.S. killing of an Iranian commander in a drone strike on January 3 in Baghdad.

Iran‘s Foreign Ministry urged those involved in the crash to avoid making it an “excuse for political gestures.”

Tension between Tehran and Washington has ratcheted higher since 2018, when the United States withdrew from Iran‘s nuclear pact with world powers and reimposed sanctions, and erupted into the tit-for-tat military strikes this month.

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