Anonymous ID: fca808 Jan. 9, 2020, 8:01 p.m. No.7768945   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8963

>>7768910

 

voat has been down all day.

 

backup up now.

 

https://voat.co/v/whatever/3601511

 

When Voat comes back online, you can immediately tell the accounts that are run by machines - they instantly post some news article they've been spam submitting for hours on end. (whatever)

Anonymous ID: fca808 Jan. 9, 2020, 8:29 p.m. No.7769169   🗄️.is đź”—kun

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/video-outside-jeffrey-epsteins-cell-no-longer-exists-government-says

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7222949/Maurene-Comey-U-S-prosecutor-working-case-billionaire-sex-offender-Jeffrey-Epstein.html

Anonymous ID: fca808 Jan. 9, 2020, 8:32 p.m. No.7769200   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9205 >>9318 >>9338 >>9369

These are, for the most part, children and grandchildren of the original Iranians who fled the ayatollahs 40 years ago. They are the offspring of the previous Iranian establishment under the Shah. The original refugees were not boat people. They were pro West, pro modern, wealthy, educated and skilled. They came to Canada and settled into middle and upper middle class, mostly suburban neighborhoods. They are peaceful and do not commit crimes. They are prosperous, and are not isolationist. They are not religious fanatics.

 

The ayatollahs hate these people - for they represent everything the ayatollahs oppose. It would not surprise me for a moment if they shot that plane down on purpose, just to kill these people, because their very existence points out the failure of the Shiite revolution. Why did they let that plane take off in the middle of a war zone in the first place? Civilian air traffic had been ordered out of the area hours earlier.

 

This is not the first time Canadian Iranians have been murdered by the regime. Detention, torture, and murder of these people specifically has been an ongoing issue with Iran, and one of the reasons Canada no longer has an embassy there.

 

Here is the travel advisory for Iran:

 

https://travel.gc.ca/destinations/iran

 

Those 'Canadians' on that plane

..

Mojtaba Abbasnezhad​, 26, was an engineering PhD student at the University of Toronto.

 

Iman Aghabali, 28, was an electrical engineer and PhD student at McMaster University in Hamilton.

Fareed Arasteh, 32, was a biology PhD student at Carleton University in Ottawa. He was in Iran to get married, but his fiancée, Maral Gorginpour, wasn’t on the plane: she was waiting in Iran for a visa to join her husband.

Arshia Arbabbahrami was a Grade 12 student at Western Canada High School in Calgary.

A family from Ajax, Ont. was on the plane: Wife Evin Arsalani, 30, husband Hiva Molani, 38, and one-year-old daughter Kurdia Molani.

Siblings Mohammad Asadi Lari, 23, and Zeynab Asadi Lari, 21, were visiting their parents and younger sister in Iran, a family friend said. Both were students at the University of Toronto, in medicine and science, respectively.

Roja Azadian was supposed to travel to Canada with her husband, a student at Ottawa’s Algonquin College, but a ticket mix-up meant he couldn’t board the plane with her.

Ghanimat Azhdari, a University of Guelph PhD student, was from a tribal territory in Iran and worked with advocacy groups for Indigenous rights and biodiversity.

Edmonton OB-GYN Shekoufeh Choupannejad, 56, was in Iran visiting family with daughters Saba Saadat, 21, a University of Alberta science student, and Sara Saadat, 23, a U of A science graduate.

Delaram Dadashnejad, 26, was a student in Vancouver coming back from a visit to Tehran, according to her friend Dina Sarpoushan of North Vancouver.

Asgar Dhirani, 74, was a semi-retired accountant from the Toronto area who came to Iran for a tour of religious sites. His wife, Razia, was touring with him but travelled home on another flight.

Behnaz Ebrahimi, 45, was a property valuation analyst in Toronto.

Mansour Esnaashary Esfahani, 29, was an engineering PhD candidate at the University of Waterloo. A friend at the school told The Globe he had gone to Iran to get married, but his wife, Hanieh, was not on the plane.

Dr. Parisa Eghbalian, 42, a dentist from Aurora, Ont., was with daughter Reera Esmaeilion, 9.

Mehdi Eshaghian was an engineering PhD student at McMaster.

harieh Faghihi, 58, was a Halifax dentist.

Faezeh (Fran) Falsafi, 46, was a sales representative at HomeLife/Bayview Realty Inc. in Richmond Hill, Ont. She was in Iran visiting family, according to a colleague.

Shakiba Feghahati, 39, and son Rosstin Moghaddam, 10, were returning from a visit to her parents.

Marzieh (Mari) Foroutan, 37, was a geography PhD student at the University of Waterloo, a school spokesman confirmed.

Mortgage agent Iman Ghaderpanah, 34, was travelling with his wife Parinaz Ghaderpanah, 33.

Newlyweds Siavash Ghafouri-Azar, 35, and Sara Mamani, 36, were on their way back to Quebec after their wedding.

Amirhossien Ghasemi was a graduate student at the University of Manitoba’s biomedical engineering program, a friend at the school told The Globe.

Milad Ghasemi Ariani was a University of Guelph PhD student in marketing and consumer studies, the university confirmed.

Mahdieh Ghassemi, 38, was an architect on a family trip with son Arsan Niazi, 11, and daughter Arnica Niazi, 8.

Suzan Golbabapour, 49, was a realtor in Richmond Hill, Ont. Her Instagram account also showed she worked as a personal fitness trainer.

Anonymous ID: fca808 Jan. 9, 2020, 8:33 p.m. No.7769205   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9318

>>7769200

>7769200

 

Sahar Haghjoo, 37, worked at the Toronto YWCA to help immigrant and refugee women settle in Canada. She was on the plane with Elsa Jadidi, 8, her only child.

 

Civil engineers Bahareh Hajesfandiari, 41, and Mirmohammad Sadeghi, 43, of Winnipeg were travelling with daughter Anisa Sadeghi, 10.

 

Vancouver-area engineer Ardalan Ebnoddin Hamidi, 48, and teacher Niloufar Razzaghi, 45, were a couple travelling with daughter Kamyar Ebnoddin Hamidi, 15.

 

Saeed Kashani, 30, was a PhD candidate in chemistry at the University of Ottawa. A friend of his told The Globe he was in Iran to visit his parents and siblings.

 

Dr. Forough Khadem, 38, was an immunology researcher at the University of Manitoba.

 

Fatemeh Mahmoodi, 31, was a finance student at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax, the school said in a statement.

 

Maryam Malek, 41, was also a Saint Mary’s student in the same program as Ms. Malek.

 

Mohammad Moeini, 35, was a mechanical designer at Bombardier Recreational Products in Valcourt, Que., the company said in a statement.

 

Engineer Arvin Morattab, 37, of Saint-Bruno-Que., was travelling with wife Aida Farzaneh, according to the Windsor Star.

 

A married couple of University of Alberta engineering professors, Pedram Mousavi, 47, and Mojgan Daneshmand, 43, were travelling with daughters Daria Mousavi, 14, and Dorina Mousavi, 9.

 

Winnipegger Farzaneh Naderi, 38, was travelling with her son Nozhan Sadr, 11.

 

Zahra Naghibi, 44, was a civil engineer and PhD candidate at the University of Windsor returning from a holiday trip with her husband.

 

Milad Nahavandi, 34, was a PhD student in the Industrial Bioproduct Lab at Western University.

 

Alma Oladi was a mathematics PhD student at the University of Ottawa.

 

Alireza (Ali) Pey, 47, was an electrical-engineering graduate who founded a startup in the Ottawa area.

 

Mansour Pourjam, 53, was a lab technician at the Ottawa Denture & Implant Centre.

 

Dr. Naser Pourshabanoshibi, 53 and Dr. Firouzeh Madani, 54, were a married couple, both physicians, who were returning home to North Vancouver after visiting their parents in Iran.

 

University of Alberta students Arash Pourzarabi, 26, and Pouneh Gorji, 25, were in Iran to get married.

 

Ontario Tech University sessional lecturer Razgar Rahimi, 38, died on board with wife Farideh Gholami and son Jiwan Rahimi, 3.

 

Nasim Rahmanifar was a graduate student in mechanical engineering at the University of Alberta.

 

Niloufar Sadr, 61, was a political activist and former art-gallery manager in Montreal. She had three children.

 

Mechanical engineer Mohsen Salahi, 31, and civil engineer Mahsa Amirliravi, 30, were a couple who taught at Toronto’s Cestar College of Business, Health and Technology.

 

North Vancouver engineer Mohammad (Daniel) Saket, 33, was on the plane with wife Fatemah (Faye) Kazerani, 32, his company said in a statement.

 

Mohammad Salehe, 32, was a University of Toronto PhD student.

 

University of Windsor PhD student Hamidreza Setareh, 31, and researcher Samira Bashiri, 29, were a married couple who had been in Canada for about a year.

 

Sheyda Shadkhoo, 41, worked as a control substances co-ordinator at the the Markham office of the inspection and certification SGS, according to her LinkedIn profile.

 

Afifa Tarbhai, 55, was an accounts administrator at a Toronto property-management firm travelling with daughter Alina Tarbhai, 31, an administrative clerk at the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation.

 

Maya Zibaie, 15, was a Grade 10 student at Toronto’s Northern Secondary School.