A flight recorder, also known as "black box", purportedly recovered from the crashed Ukrainian airliner, Boeing 737-800, is seen in this still image taken from a video, in Teheran, January 10, 2020. /Reuters
Iran will send the black boxes from a downed Ukrainian airliner to Ukraine, Iran's minister of Roads and Urban Development, Mohammad Eslami, said on Wednesday, according to the Tasnim news agency.
The Ukraine International Airlines flight was shot down on January 8 by an Iranian ground-to-air missile, killing 176 people in what Tehran termed a "disastrous mistake" at a time of heightened tensions with the United States.
Read more: Iran confirms Ukrainian plane hit by two short-range missiles
Ukraine initially lacked the technical capability to read the boxes but now says it has that ability, Eslami said. He said "the Americans" may have provided Ukraine with the necessary software and documents to read the black boxes of the 737-800 airliner made by U.S.-based Boeing Co.
The reading of the boxes will take place in coordination with the United Nations' International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).
People gather for a candlelight vigil to remember the victims of the Ukraine plane crash, at the gate of Amri Kabir University that some of the victims of the crash were former students of, in Tehran, January 11, 2020. /AP
"The necessary coordination is in this way that the reading of the black box be done in the country of Ukraine in the presence of representatives of ICAO," Eslami said. "And if the conditions aren't provided then at that time the reading will take place together in France."
Read more:
Iran to examine downed plane's black boxes, no plan yet to send them abroad
The fate of the cockpit voice and data "black box" recorders has been the subject of an international standoff eclipsed by the coronavirus crisis, which Iran says has also contributed to delays in a probe by Iran's Air Accident Investigation Board.
Iran's envoy to ICAO said last week that France's BEA air accident agency had been asked by Iranian investigators to read the black boxes if the BEA could accommodate this.
A spokesman for BEA said it had exchanged messages with Iran offering technical support and discussing logistics due to the coronavirus crisis, but added that Iran had not conveyed a formal decision on how to read the black boxes.