This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.
The General Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces has rejected a media report saying that the helicopter crash in May in which Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi died was caused by weather conditions and the aircraft’s inability to handle the weight it was carrying.
Iran’s semiofficial Fars news agency reported on August 21 that the investigation into the helicopter crash had been “fully completed by the regulatory and security institutions.”
Fars quoted an unnamed security source informed of the final investigation as saying there was “absolute certainty that what happened was an accident.” The monitoring and security institutions “did not identify a suspicious factor” in their final assessments, Fars reported.
The two reasons given for the crash were bad weather conditions and the helicopter’s inability to handle the weight of extra passengers that exceeded safety protocols, the source added.
According to the Fars report, the chopper was carrying two passengers beyond the recommended capacity when it crashed.
But after the Fars report, the General Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces “strongly rejected” the reported findings, saying in a statement carried by state media that it was “distorted and discredited.”
The headquarters said the claim that the helicopter was carrying more people than its capacity was “fundamentally false.”
The Bell 212 helicopter had a capacity of 15, including one pilot, according to the manufacturer. Raisi and seven others were killed when the helicopter crashed on its way to the city of Tabriz on May 19 in heavy fog as it crossed a mountainous and forested area.
Some reports at the time noted that because of international sanctions it has been difficult for Iran to obtain parts for its aging helicopter fleet. The Bell 212 was made in the United States and procured by Iran from the United States before the 1979 Iranian revolution.
Iran elected a new president, reformist Masud Pezeshkian, in June and on August 21 the country’s hard-line parliament approved his 19-member Cabinet, accepting the entire slate of ministers without a change for the first time since 2001.