Iran claims secret recording about Flight PS752's destruction is fake - Action News
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Iran claims secret recording about Flight PS752's destruction is fake

Iran is pushing back at what it calls "fruitless sensationalization" of theFlight PS752 disasterin the wake of a CBC News report about a secretly-recorded conversation that suggests the world may never know the truth about what happened.

Recording suggests Iran's foreign minister proposed alternate explanations for the crash

A rescue worker searches the area where Flight PS752 crashed in Shahedshahr, southwest of the capital Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2020. (The Associated Press)

Iran is pushing back at what it calls"fruitless sensationalization" of theFlight PS752 tragedyin the wake of a CBC News report about a secretly-recorded conversation that suggests the world may never know the truth of whathappened.

As the regime celebratesthe 42nd anniversary of the Islamic Revolution that overthrew the country's monarchy, Iran'sMinister of Foreign Affairs Mohammad Javad Zarif and his spokesperson today responded to CBC's story by claiming the recording is a fake.

"The allegations made in this article are incorrect and baseless and many of the statements attributed to Dr. Zarif are fundamentally not compatible with the language that he commonly uses and the claim of the existence of such a tape is not true,"ministry spokespersonSaeed Khatibzadehsaidin a statement in Farsiposted on the ministry's webpageand translated by CBC News.

"We advise the Government of Canada to act professionally instead of its own fruitless sensationalism and to submit an expert report on the accident if it has an opinion."

Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. (Associated Press)

CBC News has confirmed the RCMP, theCanadian Security Intelligence Service and theCommunications Security Establishmenthave hadthe recording of the private conversation in their custody for weeks. The security servicesareanalyzing the recording's authenticity and treating it with the "gravity it deserves," saidRalph Goodale,Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's special advisor on theFlight PS752 file.

Truth may never be exposed, according to recording

CBC Newslistened to the recording and had three people translate it from Farsi to English to capture nuances in the language.

Sources identified the voice on the audio as belonging toZarif. The individual is heard saying on the recording that there are a "thousand possibilities" to explain the downing of the jet, including a deliberate attack involving two or three "infiltrators" a scenario he said was "not at all unlikely."

He is also heard saying in Farsi thatthe truth about the aircraft's destruction likelywill never be revealed by the highest levels of Iran's government and Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps an elite wing of the country's military overseen by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country's supreme leader and commander-in-chief. The IRGC is designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S., Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.

"There are reasons that they will never be revealed," he says in Farsi. "They won't tell us, nor anyone else, because if they do it will open some doors into the defence systems of the country that will not be in the interest of the nation to publicly say."

WATCH | Iran claims secret recording about downed airliner is fake:

According to sources, the audio of the private conversation was captured in the months after the aircraft was destroyed onJan. 8, 2020, shortly after takeoff in Tehran. All176people aboardwere killed, including138 people with ties to Canada.

After three days of denial, Iran's PresidentHassan Rouhanistated publicly thathuman error was to blame. He said the military mistook the jetliner for a hostile target in the aftermath of an American drone strike that killed a high-ranking Iranian military general in Iraq.

Zarif tweeted Wednesday morning in response to CBC's story, insisting Iran always believed there were many possible explanationsfor the downingbut concluded human error was to blame.

"Following Flight #PS72 tragedy, I & many others insisted that ALL possibilities including foreign infiltration or electronic interference must be investigated (fake audio notwithstanding). Human error was finally judged as cause. Iran is committed to full justice for victims," the minister wrote.

Zarif's tweet and his spokesperson's comments today are believed to be their first public confirmation thatIran looked intoforeign infiltration or electronic interference as possible explanations forFlight PS752's destruction.

In his statement, Khatibzadeh said "everyone knows" that Zarif stressed "the need to examine all possibilities" duringofficial meetings in theweeks following the crash.He specifically cited "the meeting with the Foreign Minister of Canada" an apparent reference toFranois-PhilippeChampagne, the minister at the time.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Saeed Khatibzadeh claims Canada is politicizing the destruction of Flight PS752. (CBC News)

Iranian officialsuggests Canada is spreading 'rumours'

Khatibzadeh also accused Canada of politicizing Flight PS752 and upsetting families.

"Families who have lost loved ones in this unfortunate tragedy are enduring great grief that is not easy to alleviate," he wrote.

"We call on Canada not to add to the grief of bereaved families every day with such actions and rumours."

Hamed Esmaeilion,spokesperson for the association representing victims' families in Canada, says Zarif is the one causinggrief for survivors.

"Javad Zarif, his actions and the whole Iranian regime is adding to the grief of the families," said Esmaeilion. "Nothing is more valuable than human life. He says finding the truth can open doors to our defence system. What about human lives?"

Hamed Esmaeilion, his wife Parisa Eghbalian and daughter Reera Esmaeilion in happier times. Both Parisa and Reera died aboard Flight PS752. (Submitted by Hamed Esmaeilion)

Thomas Juneau is an associate professor of international affairs at the University of Ottawa who studies intelligence analysis and Canadian foreign policy. He said that while the publicemergence of the recording is a "bad surprise" and"embarassing" for Zarif, the aftermath ofPS752 "has fallen lower on the list of priorities of the governmentof Iran right now."

"Ultimately, I think what the spokesperson and the foreign minister were trying to do with the response was to try and bat it away, basically," he said.

Multiple countries including Ukraine, where the airline that operatedPS752 is based have until the end of the month to review Iran's final report on the safety investigation. It's notclear when that document will be released publicly.

The past four interim reports suggested that a long list of human errors and other issues resulted in the IRGC mistakenly firing the missile at the commercial plane.

Khatibzadeh said Iran'sfinal safety report will be written by "impartial and competent experts."

WATCH | Downed airliner may have been intentionally shot down, secret recording says:

Secret recording says its possible Flight 752 may have been intentionally shot down

4 years ago
Duration 2:49
CBC News has obtained a recording of a man sources have identified as Iran's foreign minister acknowledging that the downing of Flight 752 could have been intentional. The Canadian government and security agencies are reviewing the recording.

"Investigation into air accidents is a completely specialized and technical issue, and by spreading rumours and politicizing work, it is not possible to impose a result on the public opinion in line with the poisonous political goals," he said.

Goodale has said a forensic examination and analysis team isworking independentlyto piece together what led to the catastrophe.

"What we want to do at the end of the day for the families is to put all of this together in a coherent statement, as strong and clear as we can make it, about what happened and why it happened," said Goodale.

In a media statement,Global Affairs Canada saidthe federal government is committed to obtaining justice for the victims and the bereaved by holding Iran to account.

"Canada's police and security agencies are examining the reported audio tape with great care to determine its authenticity and full meaning. We cannot comment on its content at this time because lives may be put at risk," said Global Affairs spokesperson Christelle Chartrand.

With files from Kristen Everson