UN Honors 21 Staff Killed in Ethiopia Jet Crash

by Lisa Schlein/Voice of America

United Nations workers hold a framed photograph as they mourn their colleagues during a commemoration ceremony for the victims at the scene of the Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET 302 plane crash, near the town of Bishoftu, near Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, March 15, 2019.

The United Nations held a memorial ceremony honoring the lives of 21 U.N. staff members who died Sunday when an Ethiopian Airlines plane crashed shortly after leaving Addis Ababa.

Michael Moller, the director-general of the U.N. office in Geneva, spoke with sadness and pride Friday about the passion, dedication and expertise of the young professionals and seasoned officials who were among the 157 victims of the crash.

The U.N. staff members aboard the plane were headed to a major U.N. environment conference in Nairobi.

United Nations workers mourn their colleagues during a commemoration ceremony for the victims of the Ethiopian Airlines plane crash, near Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, March 15, 2019.

“They were people like Michael Ryan from the World Food Program, who fought the Ebola outbreak, helped Rohingya refugees, helped in countless other places,” Moller said. “I was touched by what his mother said on Irish television about him: ‘He tried to do the best for others. He was,’ she said, ‘our hero.’ And that is, I believe, true for every one of our colleagues. They are all our heroes.”

Prisca Chaoui, who spoke on behalf of the U.N. staff, called the tragedy one of the most serious to have befallen the United Nations.

“The 21 staff members who were taken away from us without the time to bid farewell to their loved ones or to their colleagues belonged to 12 specialized agencies and to one peacekeeping mission. Every day, we learn a little more about them and discover what extraordinary women and men they were,” Chaoui said through an interpreter.

Previous tragedies

Tragedy has struck the U.N. family before. In 2003, a terrorist attack on the U.N. office in Baghdad killed 22 staff members. In 2007, 17 staff members died in an attack in Algiers. In 2011, an air crash in the Democratic Republic of the Congo killed 33 people, many of them from the U.N. staff.

Chaoui said it was important to celebrate the lives of these colleagues and to recognize the heavy price some people pay to serve the United Nations and its ideals.

Popular

PCG command post in Kalayaan Island now activated

By Brian Campued To commemorate the 84th Day of Valor on Thursday, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) officially activated its Coast Guard District Kalayaan Island...

PBBM hails pause in Middle East conflict; bolsters collab with private sector amid energy emergency

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet On the heels of a reported two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran, the Philippines welcomed the development as an...

PSA hails significant gains in PH domestic labor market

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet After unveiling figures on the country’s inflation rate for March 2026, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) shared the numbers outlining the...

PCO to fake news peddlers: We will not let you get away

By Brian Campued “We will not let you get away with a crime. We will go after you and hold you to account.” This was the...