logo
Data recorder is found for Air India plane that crashed

Data recorder is found for Air India plane that crashed

Boston Globe10 hours ago

The Aviation Ministry previously announced late Friday that the government had formed a high-level investigative committee that would focus on 'preventing and handling such occurrences in the future.'
Advertisement
Flight AI171, bound for London's Gatwick Airport, crashed moments after takeoff from Ahmedabad, in India's western state of Gujarat. There was only one survivor from the 242 onboard, and dozens of people on the ground were also killed.
In a sign of the alarm caused by the crash, India's aviation regulators ordered Air India on Friday to carry out 'additional maintenance actions' on its Boeing 787 fleet. The aviation minister said there were 34 such planes in India, eight of which had already undergone the new inspections. He said the rest would be inspected 'with immediate urgency.'
It could be months before a definitive explanation emerges, but videos of the accident and other evidence have begun to offer clues about what might have brought down the plane. Among the initial questions: whether the plane's wing flaps and slats were properly extended, and why the landing gear, which creates drag, remained down.
Advertisement
Distraught relatives waited at Ahmedabad's Civil Hospital, the city's main medical facility, to claim the bodies of their loved ones for funerals. By late Friday, fewer than a dozen bodies had been released, as medical staff ran DNA tests to determine identities.
Rafeek Abdul Aziz Ahmed, who was among the relatives at the hospital, said that his nephew, who had been working as a hotel manager in London, died in the crash along with his wife and their two young children. Ahmed said the wait was becoming excruciating, as the government had not said when the bodies might be released.
'I want to know where the two small children are,' he said, standing outside the center where workers were collecting DNA samples from the relatives. 'My nephew and his family came to visit me. What will I tell their relatives in London?'
Medical workers at the facility said that what made the job hard was not just the sheer number of samples that had to be collected to identify the remains of 270 victims, but that in many cases, body parts had to be painstakingly pieced together before they could be released to families.
'For two nights now, without sleep, our teams have been working to swiftly match the DNAs of all the families,' said Harsh Sanghavi, the home minister for Gujarat, where Ahmedabad is located.
On its way down, the plane skidded into the buildings of a medical college near the airport, its tail striking a dining hall where dozens of medical students and junior doctors had been having lunch. On Saturday, a crane was still trying to extract the tail of the aircraft from the badly damaged building, and rescuers pulled out another body from the wreckage.
Advertisement
Late Friday, the site remained cordoned off after Prime Minister Narendra Modi had visited to survey the wreckage. Earth-moving machinery was clearing debris as students from the college came out carrying personal belongings like books and clothing that they had retrieved. Many said they had spent the night elsewhere, in hotels.
While the death toll among the passengers was clear by the end of Thursday, the day the plane went down, exactly how many on the ground died in the impact and fire caused by the crash is still uncertain. The government has remained tight-lipped, but security officials at the site and medical doctors say as many as three dozen people were probably killed in addition to those on board the plane. The official death toll stands at 270.
This article originally appeared in

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Families hold funerals for Air India crash victims
Families hold funerals for Air India crash victims

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Families hold funerals for Air India crash victims

Grieving families were due to hold funerals in India on Sunday for their relatives who were among at least 279 killed in one of the world's worst plane crashes in decades. Health officials have begun handing over the first passenger bodies identified through DNA testing, delivering them in white coffins in the western city of Ahmedabad. "My heart is very heavy, how do we give the bodies to the families?" said Tushar Leuva, an NGO worker who has been helping with the recovery efforts. There was just one survivor out of 242 passengers and crew on board the Air India jet when it crashed Thursday into a residential area of Ahmedabad, killing at least 38 people on the ground. "How will they react when they open the gate? But we'll have to do it," Leuva told AFP at the mortuary on Saturday. One victim's relative who did not want to be named told AFP they had been instructed not to open the coffin when they receive it. Witnesses reported seeing badly burnt bodies and scattered remains. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner erupted into a fireball when it went down moments after takeoff, smashing into buildings used by medical staff. Mourning relatives have been providing DNA samples to be matched with passengers, with 31 identified as of Sunday morning. "This is a meticulous and slow process, so it has to be done meticulously only," Rajnish Patel, a doctor at Ahmedabad's civil hospital, said late Saturday. The majority of those injured on the ground have been discharged, he added, with one or two remaining in critical care. - Girls orphaned by crash - Indian authorities are yet to detail the cause of the disaster and have ordered inspections of Air India's Dreamliners. Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu said Saturday he hoped decoding the recovered black box, or flight data recorder, would "give an in-depth insight" into what went wrong. Just one person miraculously escaped the wreckage, British citizen Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, whose brother was also on the flight. Air India said there were 169 Indian passengers, 53 British, seven Portuguese and a Canadian on board the flight, as well as 12 crew members. Among the passengers was a father of two young girls, Arjun Patoliya, who had travelled to India to scatter his wife's ashes following her death weeks earlier. "I really hope that those girls will be looked after by all of us," said Anjana Patel, the mayor of London's Harrow borough where some of the victims lived. "We don't have any words to describe how the families and friends must be feeling," she added. While communities were in mourning, one woman recounted how she survived only by arriving late at the airport. "The airline staff had already closed the check-in," said 28-year-old Bhoomi Chauhan. "At that moment, I kept thinking that if only we had left a little earlier, we wouldn't have missed our flight," she told the Press Trust of India news agency. bur-rsc/mtp

Sole survivor of Air India crash describes failed takeoff and disbelief at being alive

time6 hours ago

Sole survivor of Air India crash describes failed takeoff and disbelief at being alive

NEW DELHI -- The lone passenger who survived an Air India crash couldn't believe he was alive when he opened his eyes and was surrounded by flames, debris and charred bodies. Viswashkumar Ramesh, a British national of Indian origin, was on the flight headed to London that crashed minutes after taking off from India's northwestern city of Ahmedabad on Thursday afternoon. The accident killed 241 people on board and at least 29 on the ground. Recovery teams working until late Friday found at least 25 more bodies in the debris, officials said. It was one of India's worst aviation disasters and the first crash for a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner since the widebody, twin-engine planes went into service in 2009, according to the Aviation Safety Network database. Ramesh narrated his ordeal to India's national broadcaster from a local government hospital, saying the aircraft felt like it became stuck in midair within a few seconds of takeoff. Green and white lights flashed and the aircraft accelerated but seemed unable to gain height before the plane struck a medical college hostel in a residential area. He saw several passengers and crew members lose their lives. His brother was one of those who perished on board. Seated in 11A, Ramesh said his side of the plane landed on the ground floor of a building. He unfastened his seat belt and forced himself out through an open door. 'When I opened my eyes, I realized I was alive,' said Ramesh, who recalled parts of the plane strewn around the crash site. Ramesh sustained burn injuries on his left hand and walked some distance in shock before he was assisted by local residents and taken by ambulance to a hospital. Another brother told Sky News that Ramesh called his father moments after the crash to say he had survived but wasn't aware of what happened to his brother who was on the flight with him. 'He video called my dad as he crashed and said, 'Oh the plane's crashed. I don't know where my brother is. I don't see any other passengers. I don't know how I'm alive, how I exited the plane,'' Nayan Kumar Ramesh said. Ramesh's cousin, Ajay Valgi, told the BBC that Ramesh called relatives in Leicester, England, after the crash. 'He only said that he's fine, nothing else,' said Valgi, adding that Ramesh has a wife and a 'little boy' at home. The family is 'happy that he's OK, but we're still upset about the other brother.' Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who went to the crash site Friday, also visited the lone survivor in the hospital. 'I told Modi what all I had witnessed. He also enquired about my health,' Ramesh said from his bed. Dr. Dhaval Gameti said Ramesh, who kept his boarding pass with him in the hospital, was disoriented with multiple injuries over his body but seemed to be out of danger as the medical staff continued to monitor him. 'He is doing very well and will be ready to be discharged anytime soon,' Gameti said Saturday.

Data recorder is found for Air India plane that crashed
Data recorder is found for Air India plane that crashed

Boston Globe

time10 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Data recorder is found for Air India plane that crashed

The Aviation Ministry previously announced late Friday that the government had formed a high-level investigative committee that would focus on 'preventing and handling such occurrences in the future.' Advertisement Flight AI171, bound for London's Gatwick Airport, crashed moments after takeoff from Ahmedabad, in India's western state of Gujarat. There was only one survivor from the 242 onboard, and dozens of people on the ground were also killed. In a sign of the alarm caused by the crash, India's aviation regulators ordered Air India on Friday to carry out 'additional maintenance actions' on its Boeing 787 fleet. The aviation minister said there were 34 such planes in India, eight of which had already undergone the new inspections. He said the rest would be inspected 'with immediate urgency.' It could be months before a definitive explanation emerges, but videos of the accident and other evidence have begun to offer clues about what might have brought down the plane. Among the initial questions: whether the plane's wing flaps and slats were properly extended, and why the landing gear, which creates drag, remained down. Advertisement Distraught relatives waited at Ahmedabad's Civil Hospital, the city's main medical facility, to claim the bodies of their loved ones for funerals. By late Friday, fewer than a dozen bodies had been released, as medical staff ran DNA tests to determine identities. Rafeek Abdul Aziz Ahmed, who was among the relatives at the hospital, said that his nephew, who had been working as a hotel manager in London, died in the crash along with his wife and their two young children. Ahmed said the wait was becoming excruciating, as the government had not said when the bodies might be released. 'I want to know where the two small children are,' he said, standing outside the center where workers were collecting DNA samples from the relatives. 'My nephew and his family came to visit me. What will I tell their relatives in London?' Medical workers at the facility said that what made the job hard was not just the sheer number of samples that had to be collected to identify the remains of 270 victims, but that in many cases, body parts had to be painstakingly pieced together before they could be released to families. 'For two nights now, without sleep, our teams have been working to swiftly match the DNAs of all the families,' said Harsh Sanghavi, the home minister for Gujarat, where Ahmedabad is located. On its way down, the plane skidded into the buildings of a medical college near the airport, its tail striking a dining hall where dozens of medical students and junior doctors had been having lunch. On Saturday, a crane was still trying to extract the tail of the aircraft from the badly damaged building, and rescuers pulled out another body from the wreckage. Advertisement Late Friday, the site remained cordoned off after Prime Minister Narendra Modi had visited to survey the wreckage. Earth-moving machinery was clearing debris as students from the college came out carrying personal belongings like books and clothing that they had retrieved. Many said they had spent the night elsewhere, in hotels. While the death toll among the passengers was clear by the end of Thursday, the day the plane went down, exactly how many on the ground died in the impact and fire caused by the crash is still uncertain. The government has remained tight-lipped, but security officials at the site and medical doctors say as many as three dozen people were probably killed in addition to those on board the plane. The official death toll stands at 270. This article originally appeared in

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store