Three Vietnamese among victims of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17: Official

July 19, 2014 | 09:54
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AIDS researchers, soccer fans, a nun and a Canadian medical student were among of the passengers aboard doomed Malaysia Airlines Flight 17.


A woman walks at the site of a crashed Malaysia Airlines passenger plane near the village of Rozsypne, eastern Ukraine Friday, July 18, 2014. Photo by AP

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The Boeing 777 was carrying 298 people when it was shot down over eastern Ukraine on Thursday, sending shockwaves that rippled around the world.

All those aboard died.

As emergency workers continue to sift through the wreckage of the downed jetliner, there is now a clearer picture of who the victims were.

At least 189 were from the Netherlands.

The nationalities of other passengers included 44 Malaysians – including 15 crew and two infants; 27 Australians; 12 Indonesians, including one infant; 9 Britons; four Germans; four Belgians; three Filipinos and one person each from Canada, New Zealand, the United States and Hong Kong, according to the airlines and those governments. Vietnam’s U.N. ambassador, Le Hoai Trung, said three unidentified victims were Vietnamese. (Dual citizenship may account for a total greater than 298).

The Canadian on board has been identified as Andrei Anghel, a 24-year-old native from Ajax, Ont. Sonrin Anghel – who received the news from police late Thursday – said his son was attending medical school in Romania and was travelling to Bali on vacation.

According to his personal website, Andrei Anghel was a graduate of the University of Waterloo, where he earned an honours degree in biomedical science.

 


24-year-old Ontario medical student Andrei Anghel was among the 298 people killed when a Malaysia Airlines plane was downed over Ukraine. (Facebook)

A large contingent of researchers and scientists was on board the flight heading to an AIDS conference in Australia.

The Academic Medical Center hospital in Amsterdam said in a statement that two of its staff – renowned AIDS researcher Joep Lange and his colleague Jacqueline van Tongeren – were believed to have perished.

World Health Organization spokesperson Glenn Thomas, a 49-year-old Briton, was along among the dead.

In a statement the WHO said Thomas “will be remembered for his ready laugh and his passion for public health.”

Australian woman Kaylene Mann suffered the almost unimaginable: She lost her brother Rod Burrows and sister-in-law Mary Burrows when Flight 370 vanished in March; and, on Friday, Mann found out her stepdaughter, Maree Rizk, was killed on Malaysia Airlines Flight 17.

 "It’s just brought everyone, everything back,” her brother Greg Burrows told the Associated Press. “It’s just … ripped our guts again.”

Students at a Catholic school in Sydney, Australia, gathered to remember 77-year-old teacher Sister Philomene Tiernan.

Melbourne teacher Frankie Davison and her husband Liam were also on the flight.

“Our hearts and sympathy goes out to their children Milly and Sam, and family,” Toorak College wrote. “We are devastated by the news of this tragedy.”

The English Premier League was also affected: Soccer club Newcastle United announced two of its supporters – John Alder and Liam Sweeney – who were flying to watch the team’s tour of New Zealand were among those who perished.

World leaders have condemned the attack and are calling for a full investigation.

Global News, AP

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