Brampton man departs to collect remains of 6 family members killed in Ethiopia plane crash - Action News
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Toronto

Brampton man departs to collect remains of 6 family members killed in Ethiopia plane crash

"I lost my family,"Manant Vaidyasaid shortly before boarding a planeat Pearson airport. "It's still hard to believe. I'm totally broken."

Manant Vaidya says he intends to take remains to India for funeral rites

Manant Vaidya says his priority is to collect the remains of his family members and take them to India for final rituals. (James Morrison-Collalto/CBC)

Manant Vaidyadidn't sleep at all last night.

Then early Saturday morning, the Brampton, Ont., mandepartedfor a trip that nobody would wantto take.

His parents, sister, brother-in-law and two nieces were all killed last Sunday, when a flight from the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa crashed shortly after takeoff. None of the 157 people on board Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 survived.

"I lost my family,"Vaidyasaid shortly before boarding a planeat Toronto's Pearson International Airport. "It's still hard to believe. I'm totally broken."

Along with his wife and two children, Vaidya is on his way to Ethiopia tocollect the remains of his loved ones. Then, he intendsto fly to India where his extended family residesfor final rituals. He has been in frequent contact with officials at both the Canadian and Indian consuls to facilitatetransportation of the remains.

"My priority is to get the closure, to the bodies,to the souls.I want to make sure that they rest in peace," he said.

Vaidya expects to spend two days in Ethiopia, where he will try to help authorities identify the remains of his family members and visit the field where the Boeing 737 Max 8 slammed into the ground. He said Peel policecollected a DNA sample from him on Tuesday that will be used to attempt to distinguish his relatives from the other victims.

He lost his father,Pannagesh Vaidya, 73, and his motherHansini Vaidya, 67; his sisterKosha Vaidya, 37, and his brother-in-lawPrerit Dixit, 45; as well ashis two nieces Ashka Dixit, 14, and AnushkaDixit, 13. The teenage girls, who were both students at schools in Peel, were his sister's daughters.

From left to right: Ashka Dixit, Prerit Dixit, Kosha Vaidya, and Anushka Dixit. The family was among those killed when a Boeing 737 Max 8 jet crashed in Ethiopia. (Pramesh Nandi/Facebook )

"It's still unbelievable for me to even digest the news that they are no more," Vaidyatold CBCToronto. Sometimes he prefers to think that they are still on vacationand that "they are still going to return."

But he expects the tragic truth of the situation to hit him particularly hard in Addis Ababa.

"Once I get over there, maybe I will face reality. I don't know what I'm going to do. I just want to get the closure and answers to all my questions about what happened and why it happened."

Answers, however, could still be far off.A team of investigators in Paris have begun examining the black box recorders recovered from the crash site.Experts say it is too soon to know what caused the crash, but aviation authorities worldwide have groundedBoeing's 737 MAX 8s and 9sin response.

Flight data has already indicated some similarities with a crash by the same model of plane during a Lion Air flight in October. All 189 people onboard were killed. Both planes crashed within minutes of takeoff after pilots reported problems.

Investigators have notified other families that it could take up to six months to identify their loved ones.

Vaidyasays he eventually wants clarity about what led to the crash. But for now, he's focused on his family.In India, he will gather with other relatives to say goodbye to those they havelost.

Six members of this Brampton family are among the dead in Sunday's Ethiopian Airlines crash. (Garry Asselstine/CBC)

With files from Haweya Fadal and Reuters