Wednesday 30 March 2016

Former Canadian minister Jean Lapierre dies in Quebec plane crash alongside wife and three siblings


Former Canadian minister Jean Lapierre dies in Quebec plane crash alongside wife and three siblings

A former Canadian cabinet minister has died in a plane crash alongside four members of his family as they travelled to his father’s funeral.
Jean Lapierre, 59, was with his wife, two brothers and sister when the aircraft crashed off an island in eastern Quebec on Tuesday.
All seven people on board, including two crew members, died in the disaster near Iles-de-la-Madeleine (Magdalen Islands) Airport.
Mr Lapierre, the former transport minister and a prominent television broadcaster, had been on his way to attend the funeral of his father, who died aged 83 on Friday.
Justin Trudeau, the Canadian Prime Minister, said he was “shaken by the sudden death” of Mr Lapierre and called it a great loss to the political world.
Paul Martin, who chose the Liberal politician as his transport minister, described him as a wonderful man who understood the issues and loved people.
The family were travelling in a private Mitsubishi turboprop plane that took off from the St-Hubert regional airport south of Montreal on Tuesday morning.
“The crash took place in a field on approach to (Iles-de-la-Madeleine) airport,” said Quebec provincial police Sergeant Daniel Thibodeau, who described the weather as “not ideal” for flying.

The wreckage of an airplane lies in a field Tuesday, March 29, 2016, in Havre-aux-Maison, Quebec. (AP)
The cause of the crash at 11.40am local time (4.40pm BST) was not immediately known but CBC said the plane went down in fog and freezing rain, while Environment Canada had issued an alert for strong winds in the region.
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada is deploying a team of investigators.
The Quebec coroner's office named the victims as Mr Lapierre, his wife Nicole Beaulieu, Martine Lapierre, Marc Lapierre, Louis Lapierre and crew members Pascal Gosselin and Fabrice Labourel.
After retiring from politics in 2007, Mr Lapierre had become a sought-after political analyst in English and French and regularly contributed to radio and television shows, as well as co-authoring a book published in 2014.

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