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Memorial service for Aussies killed in Iran air crash

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  • Memorial service for Aussies killed in Iran air crash

    Weekend Australian
    July 18, 2009 Saturday
    3 - All-round Metro Edition


    Memorial service for Aussies killed in Iran air crash

    BYLINE: Lex Hall



    TWO members of the Armenian-Australian community killed in an airline
    crash in Iran this week will be remembered at a memorial service
    tomorrow, a family friend said last night.

    Although details are yet to be finalised, it's understood the memorial
    for Arin and Ani Melkomabkar will be held at an Armenian church in
    Sydney's north.

    The brother and sister, both in their 20s, were among 168 people
    killed when Caspian Airlines flight 7908 crashed shortly after it took
    off from Tehran on Wednesday.

    The plane caught fire en route to Armenia and plunged into farmland
    outside a village in northwest Iran, killing all 153 passengers and 15
    crew members.

    Archbishop Aghan Baliozian said the Melkomabkar family were well known
    for their work in Sydney's Armenian community. ``Ani was particularly
    active with youth movements,'' he said.

    A family friend said Ms Melkomabkar devoted part of her weekends to
    teaching Armenian to students at Sydney's Toumanian Armenian Saturday
    school.

    The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is providing assistance to
    the family, who were too distraught to be interviewed yesterday. DFAT
    could not confirm any details of the repatriation of the bodies.

    Another friend said the family were preparing for tomorrow's memorial.

    Iranian officials said yesterday a technical problem was to
    blame. ``The pilot could probably not be blamed for this crash and we
    think it was likely due to a technical problem,'' Ahmad Majidi, head
    of the Transport Ministry's crisis unit, was quoted by the Mehr news
    agency as saying.

    Iranian officials said three black boxes from the Russian-built
    Tupolev airliner had also been found, but two were seriously damaged.

    ``Because of the severity of the accident two systems linked with the
    black box have been damaged in such a way that the tapes have come out
    of the boxes and scattered on the ground,'' Mr Majidi said.

    Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said the pair, whose names were listed
    on the flight's passenger manifest, were dual Australian-Iranian
    citizens.
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