'I couldn't sleep last night,' says grief-stricken B.C. travel agent who booked trips on crashed airliner - Action News
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British Columbia

'I couldn't sleep last night,' says grief-stricken B.C. travel agent who booked trips on crashed airliner

Ali Najafi, the co-owner of Apadana Travel in North Vancouver, says he is devastated after learning six of his customers were passengerson the ill-fated Ukrainian International Airlines flight which crashed outside Tehran on Wednesday, killing all 176 people on board.

'The customers are all our family,' says Ali Najafi of Apadana Travel

A worker searches the scene where a Ukrainian plane crashed in Shahedshahr, southwest of Tehran, Iran, on Wednesday. Flight PS752, carrying 176 people, crashed shortly after takeoff, killing all on board. (The Associated Press/Ebrahim Noroozi)

Ali Najafi, the co-owner of Apadana Travel in North Vancouver, says he is devastated after learning six of his customers were passengerson the ill-fated Ukrainian International Airlines flight which crashed outside Tehran on Wednesday, killing all 176 people on board.

The flight included 63 Canadians, the majority of whom were from the Edmonton area. At least12 of the passengers, including a family of three, had connections to British Columbia.

Najafi, who said his customers came from B.C., Winnipegand Calgary, is reeling from the news.

"I couldn't sleep last night," Najafi said. "We knew them personally The customers are all our family."

Najafi said one customer had called him from Tehran on Tuesdaytryingto get on Wednesday'sflight with her two young children. Her husband was already scheduled on the flight, but now the family wanted to travel together and return to Canada earlier.

Delaram Dadashnejad, 26, who was studying nutrition at Langara College in Vancouver, was among those killed in the crash. (Delaram Dadashnejad/Facebook)

But Najafi couldn't book the trio on the flight,as there were no seats left.

Her husband left on the flight.He isamong the dead.

"Today morning she called and she was crying," Najafi said, breaking down in sobs.

"I don't know if I should be happy or sad because at least they could save their lives because there wasn't seats available on that flight."

Another passenger his agency booked was a young student who had to cancel an earlier flight because her visa did not arrive on time.

"She told us 'Thank you so much to help me to visit my family and I will bring you guys something from Iran as a gift,'" he said.

"But she was on that flight."

Najafi said Flight PS752 to Kyiv was a popular route because it was well-priced,and it could get you from the Ukraine capital toToronto. At a news conference Wednesday afternoon, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said a total of 138 passengers from the ill-fated flight were scheduled on a connecting flight to Canada.

Najafi and his colleagues havebeen fielding phone calls all day from anxious customers trying to rebook trips, some of them eager to leave Iran sooner than anticipated because of its rising tensions with the United States.

He says he and his colleagues are doing their best torebook customers through different airlines to get them home as soon as possible, but it's toughgiven the limited routes between Canada and Iran.

"You can't do anything, right?We just sell the ticket."

With files from Bal Brach, Alexander Gibb, On The Coast