Military Sends Second Aircraft After Prime Minister Trudeau’s Plane Breaks Down in Jamaica

Military Sends Second Aircraft After Prime Minister Trudeau’s Plane Breaks Down in Jamaica
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau waves as he steps off a plane, June 14, 2023 at CFB Bagotville in Saguenay, Que. The Canadian Press/Jacques Boissinot
The Canadian Press
Updated:
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The plane that flew Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to Jamaica for a family vacation broke down earlier this week, prompting the Canadian military to send a second aircraft with a repair crew to the Caribbean island.

Defence Department spokeswoman Andrée-Anne Poulin says a maintenance issue on the Royal Canadian Air Force CC-144 Challenger was discovered on Jan. 2, before Mr. Trudeau was due to travel back to Canada.

The Canadian Armed Forces sent a second aircraft and maintenance team to Jamaica, which was able to fix the issue on Jan. 3 in time for the prime minister, who cannot take commercial flights for security reasons, to travel back on the original plane.

This was the second time in a matter of months that plane problems grounded Mr. Trudeau in another country, after technical issues with the CC-150 Polaris plane left him stranded in India for two days last September.

The government did not provide information when asked about what caused the problems with the Challenger in Jamaica.

After initially saying last month the family was paying for their stay in Jamaica, the Prime Minister’s Office clarified this week they were staying for free at a location owned by family friends.

The PMO also said the federal ethics commissioner had been consulted on those details before the trip began and that the family would reimburse the public the amount it would have cost to take a commercial flight.