Ukraine Says It’s Got Proof Iran Knew It Hit That Plane Right Away
Credit to Author: Paul Blest| Date: Mon, 03 Feb 2020 15:30:29 +0000
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Iran has ended cooperation with Ukraine in the investigation of last month’s downed Ukrainian airliner, just a day after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that a leaked recording proves Iran knew immediately that its missile downed the passenger jet, killing all 176 onboard.
The recording of a conversation between a pilot of another plane and Tehran’s air control tower on January 8 was played on Ukrainian television channel 1+1 on Sunday. In the recording, the pilot appears to say that he saw the “light of a missile” and “it was an explosion,” according to the Associated Press.
Zelensky said in an interview with 1+1 that the recording “proves that the Iranian side knew from the start that our plane had been hit by a missile,” according to Reuters.
Previously, Iranian officials said that the two countries were working on aspects of the investigation together, including the black box review, according to Iranian news agency Mehr. In response to the leak, however, Iran said it would no longer cooperate with Ukrainian authorities.
READ: Iran arrested the man who filmed the jet getting accidentally shot down
“This action by the Ukrainians makes us not want to give them any more evidence,” Iranian investigator Hassan Rezaifar told Mehr, according to AP.
The downing of the jet happened as Iran was launching a retaliatory airstrike at Iraqi bases where U.S. forces were stationed following a January 3 drone strike that killed top Iranian general Qassem Soleimani. In the immediate aftermath, the Iranian military denied that the jet was hit by a missile and blamed the explosion on a mechanical failure; three days later, however, Iran admitted that it mistakenly shot down the Kiev-bound airliner.
The vast majority of those onboard were Iranian and Canadian nationals, and the rest included people holding passports from Ukraine, Sweden, Afghanistan, Germany, and the United Kingdom, according to Ukrainian authorities.
Cover: Stewardesses with Ukrainian airline react near to coffins of the flight crew members of the Ukrainian 737-800 plane that crashed on the outskirts of Tehran, during a memorial service at Borispil international airport outside Kyiv, Ukraine, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2020. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)
This article originally appeared on VICE US.