Toronto: Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Thursday offered a formal apology to families of the victims of the Air-India Kanishka bombings on the 25th anniversary of the worst terror attack in the country's history.
"Some wounds are too deep to be healed even by the remedy of time," Harper said on Wednesday at Air India memorial in Humber Bay Park in Toronto. "We are sorry."
The destruction of Air India Flight 182 "was, and remains, the single worst act of terrorism in Canadian history," he said, adding terrorism is "an enemy with a thousand faces, and a hatred that festers in the darkest spots of the human mind."
"This was evil. Perpetrated by cowards. Despicable. Senseless. And vicious," Harper said.
The statement follows 'damning indictment' of last week by former Supreme Court Justice John C Major report blaming a "cascading series of errors" by the Canadian government.
Canadian Public Safety Minister Vic Toews, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty, Toronto Mayor David Miller, Indian High Commissioner to Canada S M Gavai and senior officials of RCMP and Canadian Security Intelligence Services were also present on the occasion.
The ill-fated Montreal-New Delhi Air India Kanishka flight via Toronto and London exploded mid-air 45 minutes before it was to land at London's Heathrow Airport, killing all 329 people on board, most of whom were Canadians of Indian descent.
Memorials marking the 25th anniversary of the Air India bombings were also held in Ottawa and Vancouver.
Canadian Transport Minister John Baird attended the Ottawa ceremony while Asia-Pacific Gateway Minister Stockwell Day joined the victims' families at the Vancouver memorial.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's message on the occasion was also readout at the gathering.
Mourners and dignitaries yesterday observed a minute's silence to honour the victims during an annual service at a memorial garden in the remote Sheeps Head peninsula on Ireland's West Cork coast.
The gathering fell silent at 8.13 am (local time), the moment Flight 182 disappeared from radar screens.
Irish Foreign Affairs Minister Michael Martin said the "tragic events had forged unbreakable bonds between the people of three continents."
Ireland and the local community "gladly open their arms" each year to the families and friends of the victims after their "long journey to this hallowed ground," he said.
"You will always be welcome here," he said to a gathering that included Minister for Corporate and Minority Affairs Salman Khurshid and Canadian Immigration Minister Jason Kenney.
"Some wounds are too deep to be healed even by the remedy of time," Harper said on Wednesday at Air India memorial in Humber Bay Park in Toronto. "We are sorry."
The destruction of Air India Flight 182 "was, and remains, the single worst act of terrorism in Canadian history," he said, adding terrorism is "an enemy with a thousand faces, and a hatred that festers in the darkest spots of the human mind."
The statement follows 'damning indictment' of last week by former Supreme Court Justice John C Major report blaming a "cascading series of errors" by the Canadian government.
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The ill-fated Montreal-New Delhi Air India Kanishka flight via Toronto and London exploded mid-air 45 minutes before it was to land at London's Heathrow Airport, killing all 329 people on board, most of whom were Canadians of Indian descent.
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Canadian Transport Minister John Baird attended the Ottawa ceremony while Asia-Pacific Gateway Minister Stockwell Day joined the victims' families at the Vancouver memorial.
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Mourners and dignitaries yesterday observed a minute's silence to honour the victims during an annual service at a memorial garden in the remote Sheeps Head peninsula on Ireland's West Cork coast.
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Irish Foreign Affairs Minister Michael Martin said the "tragic events had forged unbreakable bonds between the people of three continents."
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"You will always be welcome here," he said to a gathering that included Minister for Corporate and Minority Affairs Salman Khurshid and Canadian Immigration Minister Jason Kenney.
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