Remembering Mojtaba Abbasnezhad

Mojtaba Abbasnedhad in front of a cityscape
Mojtaba Abbasnezhad’s Facebook profile photo. Abbaznezhad was a PhD student in electrical and computer engineering at the University of Toronto. He was killed in the crash of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752. (Photo: Facebook)

January 10, 2020

On Wednesday, January 8, 2020, U of T Engineering student Mojtaba Abbasnezhad was among 176 passengers killed when Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 crashed shortly after takeoff from Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International Airport.

“He was a very bright guy, very talented, one of the most intelligent people I know,” his friend Pooya Poolad (ECE PhD candidate) told the CBC. “We were studying our bachelor’s back in Iran, then we kind of drifted apart. Then he came here just this past semester and we’ve kind of been reunited again, and we were planning a future together, as friends, here.”

Abbasnezhad, known to friends as Sorush, was born in 1993. He completed his Bachelor of Science in Electrical and Electronics Engineering in 2015 at Shahid Chamran University in the southwestern Iranian city of Ahvaz. He then moved to the University of Tehran, where he earned a Master of Science degree in Digital Electronic Systems in 2018. His thesis project involved hardware acceleration of an embedded system for monitoring distributed fibre optic sensors.

Abbasnezhad worked as a Digital Design Engineer at Samim Group, a media and communications technology company headquartered in Iranshahr, before moving to Canada in 2019. Last September, Abbasnezhad began his PhD studies at the University of Toronto in The Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering under the supervision of Professor Roman Genov (ECE). He also served as the teaching assistant for a second-year course on digital systems.

“He was a talented, knowledgeable and promising student,” said Genov. “[He was] well-liked by colleagues, always genuine, smiling, happy and positive.”

“He was kind and caring — after he came here, he was still actively helping people wishing to get admission, to come to Canada for grad studies,” said Poolad. “We still can’t believe, we never can believe the situation happened. It’s hard to process.”

“The ECE community feels the loss of Mojtaba profoundly,” said Professor Deepa Kundur, Chair of ECE. “We remember him as a caring and compassionate friend, a promising student and researcher, and an enthusiastic teacher.”

“Many of the victims of this tragedy were members of our extended global community — family, friends and loved ones who are mourned deeply,” said Chris Yip, Dean of U of T Engineering. “Our U of T Engineering community has been touched and we are devastated by this terrible loss.”

Resources are available for students, staff and faculty who are feeling distressed.

Additional resources for students, including multilingual support, can be found here.

This story originally appeared on U of T Engineering News.

More information:
Jessica MacInnis
External Relations Manager
The Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
416-978-7997; jessica.macinnis@utoronto.ca