Iran Has Sent Black Boxes of Downed Plane to France: Official

Reuters
By Reuters
July 18, 2020Middle East
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Iran Has Sent Black Boxes of Downed Plane to France: Official
Debris of a plane belonging to Ukraine International Airlines, that crashed after taking off from Iran's Imam Khomeini airport, is seen on the outskirts of Tehran, Iran, on Jan. 8, 2020. (Nazanin Tabatabaee/West Asia News Agency via Reuters)

Iran has sent the black boxes from a Ukrainian airliner that it accidentally downed in January to France for analysis, a Foreign Ministry official said on Saturday.

Some 176 people were killed when the Revolutionary Guards, Iran’s most powerful military force, fired missiles at the Ukraine International Airlines mistaking it for a hostile target while on high alert during a confrontation with the United States.

“The black boxes were transported to Paris yesterday by officials of the Civil Aviation Authority and a judge,” Mohsen Baharvand, Iran’s deputy foreign minister for international and legal affairs, was quoted as saying by the the semi-official ILNA news agency.

IRAN-CRASH
General view of the debris of the Ukraine International Airlines, flight PS752, Boeing 737-800 plane that crashed after take-off from Iran’s Imam Khomeini airport, on the outskirts of Tehran, is seen in this screen grab obtained from a social media video, Iran, on Jan. 8, 2020. (Social media video via Reuters/File Photo)
NTD Photo
Memorial set up for the victims of the Ukraine International Airlines Boeing 737-800 that crashed near the Iranian capital Teheran, at the Boryspil airport outside Kiev, Ukraine, on Jan. 11, 2020. (Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images)

He said France will begin reading the flight recorders on Monday and praised the French government for its “very good cooperation with the Iranian delegation.”

France’s BEA air accident investigation agency is known as one of the world’s leading agencies for reading flight recorders.

The fate of the cockpit voice and data recorders was the subject of an international standoff after the plane was shot down on Jan. 8, with Ukraine demanding access.

In an interim report last week Iran’s Civil Aviation Organisation blamed a misalignment of a radar system and lack of communication between the air defence operator and his commanders for the downing.

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