Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Brampton’s Indian Family Unable To Identify Family Members During Trip To Ethiopia

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2019 08:30 PM

    The Brampton, Ont., family that lost six members in the Ethiopian Airlines crash says authorities in that country have told them it could take up to six months to identify their relatives' remains.


    The family said Sunday that during their trip to Ethiopia's capital Addis Ababa, they were unable to identify their family members as they'd hoped.


    "We were not able to identify, we were advised timeline would be up to six months," Manant Vaidya wrote in a text message to The Canadian Press.


    Vaidya lost his parents Pannagesh Vaidya and Hansini Vaidya, his sister Kosha Vaidya, his brother-in-law Prerit Dixit, and nieces Ashka and Anushka Dixit in the plane crash last week.


    Officials say 157 people from 35 different countries were killed when the Nairobi-bound plane crashed shortly after takeoff.


    Vaidya travelled to Ethiopia with his wife and two daughters, and had hoped to transport his family members' remains to India for a burial ritual before returning to Canada.


    The family was on the doomed flight as they travelled to Kenya on a vacation to visit Kosha's birthplace, which Manant said his 37-year-old sister hadn't visited for decades.


    Her daughters, 14-year-old Ashka and 13-year-old Anushka, were looking forward to going on a safari, he said.


    Manant said his parents were from Gujarat, India, but had lived in Kenya for three or four years and later returned to India. Kosha moved to Ontario in 2004 after marrying her husband, who already lived in Canada.


    The girls were strong students and enrolled in specialized science and technology courses, Manant said. Ashka was also known for her singing voice, while Anushka was talented in dance and was learning a traditional Indian form called khattak.


    Prerit, 45, worked as a medical lab assistant for LifeLabs and also held a job at Ontario's Ministry of Health. Kosha used to work for the Canadian Hearing Society, said Manant.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    British Columbia Man Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash: Reports

    An environmentalist from British Columbia is being identified in media reports as one of the victims in Sunday's deadly crash of an Ethiopian Airlines plane.

    British Columbia Man Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash: Reports

    Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study

    Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study
    "It's go hard or go home," said Rob Serrouya, a University of Alberta biologist and lead author of the study released Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study

    Ottawa Professor Who Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash Remembered For Public Outreach

    Ottawa professor Pius Adesanmi, one of the 18 Canadians killed in Sunday's Ethiopian Airlines crash, is being remembered as a public intellectual whose outreach to Africans across the glob

    Ottawa Professor Who Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash Remembered For Public Outreach

    Utah Plaintiffs Seek To Force Omar Khadr To Answer Their Questions

    Relatives looking to collect on an American lawsuit against Omar Khadr are asking a Canadian court to force the former Guantanamo Bay prisoner

    Utah Plaintiffs Seek To Force Omar Khadr To Answer Their Questions

    Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

    Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man
    CHILLIWACK, B.C. — Police detectives have identified a man who was shot and killed in Chilliwack, B.C., on the weekend.

    Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

    Canadians Swamp Airlines With Safety Concerns Around Boeing 737 Following Crash

    Canadians Swamp Airlines With Safety Concerns Around Boeing 737 Following Crash
    Canada's major airlines are being inundated on social media with questions about the safety of their fleet in the wake of the fatal Ethiopian Airlines crash on Sunday.

    Canadians Swamp Airlines With Safety Concerns Around Boeing 737 Following Crash