A passenger plane crash in Iran claimed 176 lives on Wednesday — and least 63 of them were Canadian. Others may have lived in Canada for work or school.
The Ukraine International Airlines flight came down in a field mere minutes after takeoff from Tehran‘s airport, killing all on board.
Ukrainian aviation authorities initially pointed to engine failure as the cause but later backtracked, saying the investigation was ongoing and that nothing had been ruled out.
The airline released a list of passengers and crew on board the plane following the tragedy. While it includes each person’s birth year, it does not indicate nationality.
Here is what we know about the victims who lived in Canada so far.
Ghanimat Azhdari
The ICCA Consortium confirmed Ghanimat Azhdari was on the plane when it crashed. Azhdari started her PhD at the University of Guelph this past September.
“We are in utter disbelief and heartbroken at the sudden loss of such a beautiful young life — a true force of nature,” officials from the ICCA Consortium said in a statement on their website.
“She was a dear friend to all of us and will be deeply missed.”
The statement says she was a geographic information specialist and had recently represented the consortium in a “series of UN Convention on Biological Diversity meetings in Montreal.”
“She was always smiling, wherever she went, and generously shared her experience, knowledge and powerful energy. A strong activist and advocate for the global Indigenous Peoples’ movement, this is not only a loss for our ICCA Consortium family but also for many communities, organizations and movements worldwide,” the statement reads.
Milad Ghasemi Ariani
A second University of Guelph student has also been identified as a passenger on the plane by the school. Milad Ghasemi Ariani was in a marketing and consumer studies program.
Delaram Dadashnejad
An Iranian international student who was studying at Langara College, Delaram Dadashnejad, was also identified as a victim in the crash.

Delaram Dadashnejad was an international student at Langara College.
Her ID that stated she was from B.C. was found at the crash site, according to Iranian state media.
In a statement, the college’s president and CEO Dr. Lane Trotter said Dadashnejad was taking university transfer classes and was flying back to Vancouver after visiting family in Tehran.
“The loss of one of our students is one that impacts our entire community,” Trotter said. “We are heartbroken over the fatal tragedy that took place; our thoughts and prayers are with those in mourning from this incident.”
Masoumeh and Mandieh Ghavi

Masoumeh Ghavi, an engineering student at Dalhousie University, had been in Iran visiting family on holiday before she was killed in a plane crash near Tehran.
Masoumeh Ghavi/Facebook
Nova Scotia resident Masoumeh Ghavi was studying engineering at Dalhousie University. She was travelling back to Canada alongside her sister, Mandieh Ghavi, who was also killed, according to the Dalhousie Iranian Student Society. The pair was in Iran to visit family over the holidays.
Ardalan Ebnoddin Hamidi, Niloufar Khamsi Razzaghi, Kamyar Ebnoddin Hamidi
Three members of a B.C. family were confirmed to be among those killed in the Tehran plane crash.
Ardalan Ebnoddin Hamidi and Niloufar Razzaghi, a husband and wife who lived in Vancouver with their teenage son, Kamyar Ebnoddin Hamidi, were killed on their way home after a holiday, according to family friends.
Kei Esmaeilpour, a friend and head of the Civic Association of Iranian Canadians, confirmed their deaths in a statement.
“Canadian society and Iranian community lost one of the best families,” Esmaeilpour said. “Ardalan Ebnoddin-Hamidi and his family was one of the most responsible Iranian-Canadian citizens. I extend my condolences to the community and to his family in Canada and in Iran.”
Parisa Eghbalian and Reera Esmaeilion

Parisa Eghbalian and her daughter Reera appear in this Facebook photo along with her husband.
Parisa Eghbalian and her daughter, nine-year-old Reera Esmaeilion, were both on board the Ukranian flight. Eghbalian was a dentist and co-owner of Aurora Dentistry in Ontario. She owned the practice alongside her husband.
Employees tell Global News they’ve been fielding calls all day from patients wishing to express shock and condolence to the family. The workers said they were devastated at the news of their deaths and that Eghbalian’s husband, Hamed Esmaeilion, was packing to go to Tehran.
The pair were on holiday in Iran for the past two weeks for Eghbalian’s sister’s engagement party.
Her husband described his grief on Facebook.
“Among the three of us, there is so much romance that will stay with me until I die,” he wrote.
Bahareh Haj Esfandiari, Anisa Sadeghi and Mehdi Sadeghi

Mehdi Sadeghi, 43, Bahareh Haj Esfandiari, 41, and Anisa Sadeghi, 10 were all confirmed dead in a plane crash that killed 63 Canadians on Tuesday night.
Three members of a Winnipeg family are among the dead. Bahareh Haj Esfandiari, 41, Anisa Sadeghi, 10, and Mehdi Sadeghi, 43, were confirmed as victims of the plane crash by Welcome Place, where Esfandiari worked.
“We are deeply saddened to have learned a recent former employee was on the flight with her husband and daughter travelling back home to Canada after the holidays,” a Facebook post by the company reads.
Forough Khadem

Forough Khadem
Submitted/Facebook
A former PhD student at the University of Manitoba, Forough Khadem was confirmed as one of the victims by her colleagues. Khadem worked in immunology and with CancerCare Manitoba.
Evin Arsalani, Hiva Molani and Kurdia Molani

Evin Arsalani and her daughter, Kurdia, appear in this photo.
A family of three from Ajax, Ont., are among the victims.
Toronto resident Omid Arsalani told Global News that it was around 3 a.m. Wednesday when he learned that his sister, Evin Arsalani, 30, her husband, Hiva Molani, 38, and their one-year-old daughter Kurdia had been killed. The family was on their way home to Ajax, Ont. – about an hour outside Toronto – from Iran where they had attended a wedding on Dec. 8
“I just wish that I could wake up and that it would be a dream,” Arsalani said. “My sister was my best friend.”
Arsalani first learned about the crash when his older brother knocked on his door and told him his sister was on the flight.
“I opened the door and I had no idea what was going on,” he said. “I asked him are they okay are they alive? What’s going on?”
“He said ‘every soul on the plane is dead. Not one person made it.’”
Arsalani said the last time he spoke with his sister was Jan. 2 on her 30th birthday.
“The whole time we talked we cracked jokes, had a good time as she celebrated her birthday,” he said. “The last message I got from her was: only a brother can you like a father, bother you like a sister, and a brother can care for you like a mother. It was the last thing I got from her.”
Iman Ghaderpanah and Parinaz Ghaderpanah

Iman Ghaderpanah and Parinaz Ghaderpanah pictured in this undated photo.
(Parinaz Ghaderpanah/Facebook)
Global News has confirmed that married couple Iman Ghaderpanah, a mortgage specialist, and Parinaz Ghaderpanah, an RBC employee, are among the residents from the Greater Toronto area who died in the crash.
The couple volunteered regularly in Tirgan, an Iranian-Canadian non-profit that celebrates arts and culture, according to Mehrdad Ariannejad, who is on the board of directors.
“They were working very closely with us and we knew them personally,” Ariannejad told Global News. “They were really lovely, great people … Parinaz was an energetic person, a very positive person.”
Iman Ghaderpanah who worked with Mortgage Alliance in Toronto is remembered as a “well respected and friendly” colleague.
“It’s really sad news, very shocking,” Yasmine Soliman, director of communications at Mortgage Alliance, told Global News. “He was really well liked.”
RBC, where Parinaz worked as a branch manager, said it was deeply saddened to learn she and her husband were on the flight.
“Our thoughts are with all the victims and their families,” said Gillian McArdle, a spokesperson for RBC. “Our immediate focus is on supporting Ms. Ghaderpanah’s family and our colleagues and clients who worked with her.
Razgar Rahimi

Razgar Rahimi appears in this undated photo.
Dr. Razgar Rahimi, an engineering instructor at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology, died in the crash, the university announced Wednesday afternoon.
Rahimi died “along with his family,” the university said, but did not offer further details.
After getting engineering degrees from two universities in Iran, Rahimi got a PhD in electrical engineering from Oshawa, Ont.-based UOIT in 2018, according to his Linkedin profile. He taught electrical engineering, circuit design and introductory electronics.
Rahimi was born in 1981, a passenger list released by Ukraine International Airlines said. He would have been about 39.
Naser Pourshabanoshibi and Firouzeh Madani

Naser Pourshabanoshibi and Firouzeh Madani.
Submitted
Naser Pourshabanoshibi and Firouzeh Madani were also killed in the crash, according to family and friends who spoke to Global News.
Both lived in North Vancouver and had worked as doctors.
Mohammad Hossein (Daniel) Saket and Fatemeh (Faye) Kazerani

Mohammad Hossein (Daniel) Saket and Fatemeh (Faye) Kazerani.
Submitted
North Vancouver couple Mohammad Hossein Saket and Fatemeh Kazerani were also confirmed dead by family, as well as a local business owner.
Saket worked as an engineer and Kazerani worked as a hygienist, a cousin related to one of them told Global News.
Arvin Morattab and Aida Farzaneh

Aida Farzaneh and Arvin Morattab,
Aida Farzaneh/Facebook
A Montreal-based couple was identified by a friend as victims of the plane crash.
Arvin Morattab and Aida Farzaneh had both recently graduated from a PhD program at École de technologie supérieure. Farzaneh was a lecturer in the engineering department at the school.
“I can’t imagine that I have to use past tense when I’m talking about them,” said their friend, Aria Isapor.
Siavash Ghafouri-Azar and Sara Mamani

Siavash Ghafouri-Azar and Sara Mamani are among those who were killed in a plane crash outside of Tehran, Iran on Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2020.
Courtesy of Ali Dolatabadi
Siavash Ghafouri-Azar and Sara Mamani, of Montreal, had recently married before their plane went down in Iran. According to social media, Ghafouri-Azar was a performance specialist at Pratt and Whitney Canada. Mamani worked for Bombardier.
Both studied at Concordia University, their LinkedIn pages show.
Pedram Jadidi

Pedram Jadidi appears in this undated photo provided by a close friend and classmate.
A civil engineering student at the University of Windsor, Pedram Jadidi had big dreams, according to a friend. He was born in Iran and travelled back over the Christmas holiday to visit family. His friend and classmate said he was returning to Canada to begin a new semester.
“Pedram had so many wishes,” his friend, Javad Sadeghi told Global News. “He lost his father just before he came to Canada. He had only his mother.”
He said Jadidi chose to fly with the Ukrainian airline because it was affordable and he was tight on cash, as he was supporting his mother back home.
Another friend, Faraz Talebpour, said he was supposed to be on the same flight but changed his ticket. He said he was supposed to room with Jadidi at some point, but plans fell through.
Hamidreza Setare and Samira Bashiri

Hamidreza Setare and Samira Bashiri appear in this photo provided by a close friend and classmate.
Born in Iran, Hamidreza Setare was living in Windsor where he was a PhD student in mechanical engineering at the University of Windsor.
Setare and Samira Bashiri were married, according to a friend. Bashiri was also a student at the school, studying for a masters in medical biotechnology.
“Hamidreza was a very ambitious person,” said his friend, Javad Sadeghi. “He had plans to be a faculty member. He did his masters at Sharif University of Technology, the best university in Iran.”
Images of Setare provided by Sadeghi show the two posing on a field with a soccer ball and cleats.
Another friend and classmate, Faraz Talebpour, described the pair as “a lovely couple.”
Zahra Naghibi

Zahra Naghibi appears in this undated photo from LinkedIn.
Zahra Naghibi was an Iranian-born PhD candidate and research assistant at the University of Windsor’s Turbulence and Energy Lab, according to lab director David S.K. Ting.
She was also an active student leader who served as co-chair of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers’ Young Professionals Affinity Group, according to IEEE co-chair Faraz Talebpour.
“She was so kind to everyone else. She was just the definition of positivity,” Talebpour told Global News from Iran. He says Naghibi was among five people he knew on the flight, and he would have been on it too if he hadn’t altered his travel plans.
Talebpour described Naghibi as an incredible scientist, engineer, leader and person.
“She was one of the kindest, good-hearted people that I got to know,” he said.
Arash Pourzarabi and Pooneh Gorji

Arash Pourzarabi and his wife, Pooneh Gorji appear in their recent wedding photo.
Arash Pourzarabi and his new wife, Pooneh Gorji, were both computer science researchers at the University of Alberta.
They had their wedding in Iran and were returning to Edmonton to continue their studies, Akbari confirmed.
Amir Hossein Saeedinia

Amir Hossein Saeedinia appears in this undated photo.
Amir Hossein Saeedinia, born in 1994, was a new PhD student at the University of Alberta’s Centre for Design of Advanced Materials. An advisor confirmed to Global News that Saeedinia was set to arrive in Edmonton to begin his studies this week and that he was a passenger on the flight.
Mohammad and Zeynab Asadi Lari

Mohammad Asadi Lari and Zeynab Asadi Lari in a Twitter photo.
Zeynab Asadi Lari/Twitter
Twenty-three year old Mohammad Asadi Lari and his 21-year-old sister Zeynab Asadi Lari were on the plane as well, friends of the siblings told Global News.
The pair were from Vancouver, and had left the University of British Columbia to study in Toronto. Zeynab was finishing her bachelor of sciences, while her brother had earned his medical degree.
Another friend, Saman Arfaie, wrote on Facebook that Mohammad was “one of my dearest and closest friends.”
“It has been a tragedy that words would not be able to describe, nor do justice, to the magnitude and scope of it,” Arfaie wrote. “We lost some remarkable people today. Their lives and hopes cut short too soon.”
Fareed Arasteh

Fareed Arasteh is shown in a handout photo from his LinkedIn profile. Arasteh has been confirmed as one of the victims of the Iran plane crash.THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-LinkedIn MANDATORY CREDIT
THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-LinkedIn
The death of Fareed Arasteh was confirmed by Carleton University, where he was a PhD student in biology.
According to his LinkedIn profile, Arasteh was expected to complete his PhD in molecular genetics in 2023. He had previously worked and studied in Tehran.
Mansour Pourjam
Carleton University also confirmed the death of Mansour Pourjam, who was a biology alumnus.
Iman Aghabali

Iman Aghabali was confirmed to be a victim in the plane crash in Iran on Jan. 8 2020.
McMaster University
Iman Aghabali is believed to be dead, McMaster University said in a press release. Aghabali was a graduate student at the university in Hamilton, Ont. in the Faculty of Engineering.
According to a profile posted on the university’s website, Aghabali previously studied at Sharif University of Technology in Tehran.
Mehdi Eshaghian

Mehdi Eshaghian was confirmed to be a victim in the plane crash in Iran on Jan. 8 2020.
The McMaster University press release also said that another PhD student, named Mehdi Eshaghian, is believed to be dead.
Eshaghian studied in Tehran before coming to Canada and joining McMaster in September 2018.
Amirhossien Ghasemi

Amirhossiwn Ghasemi
Submitted/Facebook
Amirhossien Ghasemi, 32, was a grad student of biomedical engineering the University of Manitoba and a doctor.
Amir Shirzadi, a board member with the Manitoba Iranian Student Association, said his good friend Ghasemi was on his way back to Winnipeg after visiting family in Iran.
“I saw him before he left the country,” said Shirzadi, who added that the two played games together.
“I can’t use past tense. I think he’s coming back. We play again. We talk again. It’s too difficult to use past tense, too difficult. No one can believe it.”
— With files from Maham Abedi, Rebecca Joseph, Andrew Russell, Patrick Cain, Caryn Lieberman, Josh Elliott, Kevin Nielsen









