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Video shows Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad

Video shows Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad

Yahoo20 hours ago

The moments before an Air India passenger plane crashed in western India Thursday were captured in a video filmed from a building near the crash site, CBS News has verified.
The footage shows the plane, which had departed from the Ahmedabad Airport just minutes before with more than 240 people on board, descending over the city. It then disappears behind buildings and there is a large explosion. A huge fireball is seen billowing above the buildings.
The Air India flight, AI171, had departed for London's Gatwick airport at 1:38 p.m. local time, the airline said. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner was carrying 242 passengers and crew.
One passenger on the plane survived the crash, the airline and officials said. The survivor, a British national of Indian origin, was being treated at the hospital, they said. Casualties were also reported on the ground where the plane crashed, including at a medical college.
An investigation into the cause of the crash is being led by India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau. A U.S. team led by the National Transportation Safety Board was going to India to assist.
The plane lost signal less than a minute after takeoff, according to live flight tracking website Flight Radar. It appeared to reach an altitude of about 625 feet before descending. The crash happened five minutes after takeoff, the head of India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation, Faiz Ahmed Kidwai, told The Associated Press.
The plane appeared to have its landing gear down and flaps up when those should have been reversed, former NTSB Chair Robert Sumwalt told CBS News.
Aviation consultant John M. Cox told the AP the type of plane has "extensive flight data monitoring."
"The parameters on the flight data recorder are in the thousands," he said. "So once we get that recorder, they'll be able to know pretty quickly what happened."
The incident was the first crash of a 787-8 Dreamliner, according to Boeing's April 2025 statistical summary of incidents involving its aircraft.
Video shows Air India plane crashing in Ahmedabad
Air India plane crashes shortly after takeoff, carrying more than 240 people
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Anger and grief in Ahmedabad after India's deadliest crash in decades
Anger and grief in Ahmedabad after India's deadliest crash in decades

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  • Boston Globe

Anger and grief in Ahmedabad after India's deadliest crash in decades

Advertisement As of Thursday night, an estimated 269 people were confirmed dead, according to senior police official Vishaka Dabral. But students and faculty at the college believe the number of casualties on the ground may be higher, considering how busy the dining hall was at the time of the crash. Within a minute, the plane had ascended, leveled off, and then plummeted to the earth, erupting into a ball of fire, according to CCTV footage verified by The Washington Post. 'In a minute, everything has changed,' Vagadaya said from the hospital auditorium, where relatives waited Friday to give their blood to help identify loved ones who died in Thursday's crash, and had within a day morphed from a place of panic to a makeshift gathering site for mourners. The plane had been carrying 169 Indians, 53 British nationals, seven Portuguese nationals, and one Canadian, according to Air India. The 12 crew members were Indian. 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Duffy said the NTSB and FAA were deploying investigators to assist India in its investigation of the deadly plane crash. Duffy added that it was still very early in the investigation, but promised to take action if there were safety failures. 'If there are initial factors of concern in regards to safety, we will be made aware and we will take action. When one of these planes go down, we take it very seriously,' he said. Advertisement Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday visited the crash site, touring the wreckage and speaking with Viswash Kumar Ramesh, the sole survivor of the 242 people aboard the flight. News outlet ANI released an image of Modi looking up at the aircraft's mangled tail jutting out of the college's wall. The prime minister did not speak to reporters. Back at the Civil Hospital, still bedridden from his injuries, Ramesh spoke briefly to local media. 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How Sole Survivor of Air India Crash Walked Away From Seat 11A
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Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

How Sole Survivor of Air India Crash Walked Away From Seat 11A

The miracle survivor of the Air India jet crash that killed all 241 other people onboard has revealed how he survived the disaster. Footage of Vishwash Kumar Ramesh appearing to walk away from the crash site covered in cuts and dirt, looking distressed and bewildered, was posted on social media by newspaper India Today on Thursday. Speaking about his experience, Ramesh, who received 'impact injuries' on his chest, eyes and feet, told the Hindustan Times, 'Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed. It all happened so quickly.' The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, bound for London's Gatwick airport with 242 aboard, had just taken off when it crashed outside the Indian city of Ahmedabad. Speaking from the Civil Hospital, Asarwa in Ahmedabad, Ramesh, who still had his boarding pass with him, told the Hindustan Times: 'When I got up, there were bodies all around me. I was scared. I stood up and ran. There were pieces of the plane all around me. Someone grabbed hold of me and put me in an ambulance and brought me to the hospital.' While such an escape would be a miracle, it appears a last-minute seat change may have helped the 40-year-old British national's chances. Indian news website News18 found that in the flight bookings log, Ramesh had been in seat 11J, though his boarding pass says 11A. A seat map of the India Air 787-8 Dreamliner shows 11A is right next to the emergency exit. Research by Ed Galea, professor of fire safety engineering at London's University of Greenwich, who has conducted landmark studies on plane crash evacuations, has shown that passengers seated within five rows of an emergency exit have the best chance of getting out alive, CNN reported in January. Ramesh, who the Hindustan Times reported has lived in London for 20 years with his wife and child, had been in India for a few days to visit his family and was returning to the U.K. with his brother, Ajay Kumar Ramesh, 45. He said Ajay had been seated in a different row on the plane. 'He was traveling with me and I can't find him anymore. Please help me find him.' An investigation into the cause of the disaster, which The Daily Beast earlier reported was the first fatal crash of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner, has been launched by the Indian authorities, supported by international agencies. Air India said 169 of the 230 passengers were Indian nationals, 53 British nationals, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian.

Sole Survivor of Air India Crash Reveals New Details of Escape
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