Families of plane crash victims want the Canadian government to get tougher on Iran
Global News
Iranian-Canadians gathered on Parliament Hill Tuesday to mark 1,000 days of mourning their relatives, and they made clear their displeasure at the federal government's actions.
The families of those killed when Iran‘s military shot down Flight 752 in January 2020 are demanding the Canadian government take a harder line against the regime.
Iranian-Canadians gathered on Parliament Hill Tuesday to mark 1,000 days of mourning their relatives, and the crowd made clear their displeasure at the federal government’s actions to date.
“I already lost all my life, all my future, said Maral Gorginpour whose husband Fareed Arasteh died in the crash.
The two got married in Iran, three days before he boarded the flight.
“I need justice; I need the truth and until that day I won’t stop,” said Gorginpour, who joined hundreds in front of the Supreme Court before marching through the parliamentary precinct.
In her speech the crowd, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland promised Ottawa would take more action but did not say specifically what that would be.
“We will use all the tools at our disposal, to isolate and punish the brutal dictatorship,” Freeland said.
Her remarks were interrupted multiple times, as demonstrators called on the Liberals to kick Iranians with ties to the regime out of Canada.