logo
‘Absolutely shocking': Netflix documentary examines how the Titan sub disaster happened

‘Absolutely shocking': Netflix documentary examines how the Titan sub disaster happened

Yahooa day ago

If you were sentient in the summer of 2023, you probably remember the feverish speculation, vicarious horror, snap consternation and armchair sleuthing after the disappearance of the submersible called Titan during a commercial voyage to the wreck of the Titanic. The Titan sub disaster was inescapable for weeks as the story evolved from critical rescue mission – the best-case scenario being a mechanical failure deep in the North Atlantic with 96 hours of oxygen for the five passengers, which you better believe became a countdown clock on cable news – to tragic recovery operation.
Related: 'Incredibly disturbing': docuseries goes inside jaw-dropping LA mortuary scandal
The sub, it turned out, had imploded at 3,300 meters beneath the surface, 90 minutes into a dive that was supposed to reach 3,800 meters deep. All five passengers – British explorer Hamish Harding, British-Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his 19-year-old son Suleman, French diver Paul-Henri Nargeolet and submersible owner Stockton Rush – were killed instantly.
Even as the search for the sub, whose wreckage was eventually returned to land, continued in earnest, concerning reports about the safety record at OceanGate, the company which operated the vehicle, began to emerge: that a whistleblower had declared implosion of the sub's trademark carbon fiber hull a mathematical certainty years earlier. That Rush, the company's founder and CEO, pursued commercial voyages anyway, eluding any type of third-party certification. For the majority of the public, the story ended along those lines: a preventable tragedy, another sin of human hubris at arguably the most famous shrine to the folly of human hubris in history.
That is not wrong; according to the new Netflix documentary Titan: The OceanGate Disaster, the sub's implosion was virtually guaranteed by its design. 'I'm convinced, based on the research and the discussions that I've had, that the submersible Titan could have imploded at any time,' said the film's director, Mark Monroe. In fact, it was 'absolutely shocking' that Titan made as many successful dives – 80 attempts, 13 to Titanic depth, between 2021 and 2022 – as it did. But for those who either worked at OceanGate, were tasked with the investigation or loved someone lost on board, the story is much more complicated, and concerning, than a design flaw.
Another film would proceed through an exact timeline of Titan's final mission on 18 June, 2023; include footage of the wreckage or diagrams of its descent coordinated to text messages sent to its surface-level team; play the audio of its implosion, recorded 900 miles away by a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration device; or allow viewers to see Rush's wife Wendy hear the implosion, whose sound reached its support ship, Polar Prince, before their last text message, allowing them to mistakenly assume the sub was fine. The Netflix film, made by the veteran production company Story Syndicate, doesn't do any of that, eschewing a Seconds from Disaster-type narrative and instead focusing on the nearly decade-long procession toward disaster, through numerous decisions prizing flashy ambition over safety.
'It's scarier, in a way, to understand the decision-making over the 10-year period that led to that moment,' said Monroe. 'I feel pretty strongly if the civilians' – the paying customers OceanGate called 'mission specialists' to skirt around commercial maritime safety regulations – 'had seen the decisions made along the way, they would have been a lot more reticent to get into that submersible. And I think that was not clear, or made clear, to the public.'
With access to company footage, data, files and several former employees and whistleblowers, the 111-minute documentary paints a fuller picture of a company with idealistic ambition and plenty of scientific backing – at least at first. Founded outside Seattle in 2009 by Rush, an entrepreneur with a rich family and an engineering degree, OceanGate attracted talent from the fields of engineering, diving and marine exploration with its ambition to revolutionize deep sea travel for the masses. The question of how to make deep subs, usually made of very heavy titanium steel, lighter and nimbler – and thus commercially viable – was an appealing puzzle to an array of scientists, deep-sea divers and exploration enthusiasts.
It's what drew David Lochridge, a highly experienced submersible pilot, to uproot his family and move to Everett, Washington, to become OceanGate's operations director. In the film, Lochridge explains that he didn't initially understand, on a technical level, OceanGate's answer to the lightweight, deep-sea sub conundrum: carbon fiber, a lightweight but high-strength composite material of tightly pack carbon threads cemented with resin, used in everything from sports cars to deluxe skis. But in time, the material's problems became clear. For one, carbon fiber had never been tested at extreme depths, and thus had no reliable safety record. And two, its integrity naturally degrades with repeated use. 'There is a fatigue aspect to carbon fiber – once you use it, it won't be as good the next time you use it, by increments,' Monroe explained.
The documentary includes ample footage from OceanGate's years-long test phase, as various carbon fiber designs failed in experiments simulating high pressure. Nevertheless, Rush persisted, dismissing safety concerns from engineers on staff and continuing to insist to credulous media that commercial ventures to the Titanic were soon within reach. Lochridge and others attest to Rush's hardheaded approach, at times openly hostile to any intra-company dissent. He openly admired Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk, expressing a desire to, as one employee recalled, be a 'big swinging dick'.
In that vein, Rush claimed to be working with Boeing, Nasa and the University of Washington, though no formal partnerships existed. (In fact, a Boeing engineer involved in Titan's early designs emailed Rush in March 2012: 'We think you are at high risk of a significant failure at or before you reach 4,000 meters. We do not think you have any safety margin.') Rush also elected to withhold any OceanGate craft from third-party safety inspections, the industry standard for submersibles.
That decision proved to be a breaking point for several employees; Lochridge was fired after he inspected Titan himself, and said in a written report to Rush that he had no confidence in the submersible. The documentary includes remarkable audio of a 2018 senior staff meeting in which Rush fires Lochridge and quashes his concerns as a discrepancy of vision – 'I don't want anybody in this company who is uncomfortable with what we're doing. We're doing weird shit here and I am definitely out of the mold. There's no question. I am doing things that are completely non-standard.'
'There is a danger in the kind of cult of personality, particularly the tech bro, 'move fast and break things,'' Monroe said. 'When other people's lives are in the balance, I think we should all take a step back and be careful about that. It's one thing to put unmanned spacecraft into space, but you're taking money to provide an expedition.'
One has to wonder, given all the dissent, given the fact that the sub would produce loud cracking sounds with each descent (which Rush called, unscientifically, the carbon fiber 'seasoning' with use) – did the CEO actually believe it was safe? 'I'm not in Stockton's mind, so I don't know,' said Monroe. But he took into account Rush's public personality as a maverick, the media tailwinds in his favor. 'When you say you're going to go to Titanic in a new submersible that no one's ever done before, and the sound of your own voice resonates year after year while you're trying to figure out how to do it, I think there's a pressure that builds, that suggests 'I have to do this.''
What is clear, from numerous interviews, was that 'if you went against the boss, there were going to be repercussions.' Lochridge knows this well; after he filed a whistleblower complaint with the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Osha), OceanGate sued him for improperly disclosing confidential information to regulators. The legal costs, and Osha's protracted investigation, forced him to withdraw his complaint, ending what could have been the one regulatory oversight on the company.
OceanGate continued apace; the film lingers only briefly on the dive in 2022 which seemed to damage the sub, even according to the company's own 'real-time monitoring system'. Titan imploded on its next dive to Titanic depths a year later, after several aborted attempts due to inclement weather. Though the 'delamination' of the carbon fiber hull is the presumed cause, the US Coast Guard's official written report, including recommendations for the prevention of a similar tragedy, has yet to be publicly released. 'I don't know what those recommendations could be,' said Monroe, 'but you would think they would have to do with how to run an experimental submersible when offering it to the public.'
Such as, perhaps, oversight, or a healthier sense of skepticism when the only safety assurances come from the company itself. Rush 'believed in the ethos of move fast and break things. Rules don't apply when you want to change the way things work,' said Monroe. 'That's dangerous when other people's lives are at stake. There are certain rules that do apply, like the rules of physics, the rules of science – these rules do apply to all of us.'
Titan: The OceanGate Disaster is now available on Netflix

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Air India plane crash claims at least 241 lives as one passenger survives
Air India plane crash claims at least 241 lives as one passenger survives

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Air India plane crash claims at least 241 lives as one passenger survives

An Air India plane travelling from India to London crashed within moments of take-off on Thursday, killing 241 passengers and crew, and more people on the ground. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, which took off from the city of Ahmedabad, in western India, ploughed into a residential area, hitting a hospital complex and medical student hostel. One passenger survived the disaster - a British national, who was sitting in seat 11A and who later told family he had no idea how he walked away. It is not yet clear what caused the crash, which Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi described as "heartbreaking beyond words". Officials warned the death toll could rise in what was quickly described as one of the deadliest aviation disasters in India's history. Air India Flight AI171 departed Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport at 13:39 local time (08:09 GMT), and was due to touch-down at London's Gatwick Airport at 18:25 BST. There were 230 passengers on board, including 169 Indian nationals, 53 Britons, seven Portuguese citizens, one Canadian and 12 crew members. The local police chief told the BBC that 204 bodies had been recovered so far - but it is not known how many of those victims were on the plane or were on the ground. Images from the scene show debris scattered across a large crash zone, with parts of the aircraft embedded in buildings. The extraordinary news that one person had survived the disaster quickly made international headlines, as the British national, Vishwashkumar Ramesh, was filmed limping towards an ambulance, with smoke billowing in the background. British man is only passenger to survive India plane crash What could caused Air India plane to crash in 30 seconds? "Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise... it all happened so quickly," he told local media from hospital. His cousin, Ajay Valgi, said Mr Ramesh called his family to say he was "fine", but he does not know the whereabouts of his brother, also called Ajay, who was on the plane with him. Thursday's incident was the first fatal crash involving a 787 Dreamliner, first introduced in 2011. Boeing said in a statement that it "stands ready" to support the investigation, which is being led by India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau. "We are in contact with Air India regarding Flight 171 and stand ready to support them. Our thoughts are with the passengers, crew, first responders and all affected," the bureau said. US and British investigators will travel to India, with the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) saying it will assist Indian authorities. India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said the aircraft issued a mayday call seconds after take-off. It lost contact with air traffic control shortly thereafter, crashing just outside the airport's perimeter. The crash site lies within a medical campus with 10 specialised centres. The BBC's Sachin Pithva described scenes of chaos, with rescue workers retrieving the remains of those who perished. Thick smoke was still billowing from the buildings hours after the crash, and passengers' passports were strewn around, he reported. Gujarat's Additional Chief Secretary for Health confirmed the aircraft struck the students' hostel and staff quarters of Byramjee Jeejeebhoy Medical College and Civil Hospital. "It crashed into the hostel mess and then bounced off on to one of the hostel buildings," the hospital's dean, Dr Meenkashi Parekh, told the BBC. The crash happened at lunchtime when many students were in the canteen, she added. Photos show a huge part of the plane stuck in one of the hostel buildings, and a dusty, deserted mess hall with plates of uneaten food still on the tables. "Most of the students escaped... but the building caught fire and the smoke was extremely thick. So, 10 to 12 students were trapped," the dean said. She added it was possible that several students had been killed. Officials said dozens were in hospital. Tata Group, which owns Air India, has said it would give one crore rupee - the equivalent of about £86,000 - to the families of each person who was killed in the crash. Prime Minister Modi wrote on X: "The tragedy in Ahmedabad has stunned and saddened us. It is heartbreaking beyond words. In this sad hour, my thoughts are with everyone affected by it." Both Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said they are being kept updated as the situation develops, while King Charles expressed his "deepest sympathies" to all those affected by the crash. Starmer confirmed that a UK team had been dispatched to Gujarat to join the investigation as he urged families and friends of anyone affected to contact the Foreign Office. Additional reporting by Tiffany Wertheimer

Lone survivor of Air India crash sat in seat 11A — but experts say that's not usually the safest place on a plane
Lone survivor of Air India crash sat in seat 11A — but experts say that's not usually the safest place on a plane

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Lone survivor of Air India crash sat in seat 11A — but experts say that's not usually the safest place on a plane

The sole survivor of the deadly Air India crash that killed 241 passengers onboard was strapped into seat 11A — though aviation experts say it's not typically considered one of the safest spots on an airplane. British passenger Vishwash Kumar Ramesh was in an emergency exit window seat just behind business class when the Boeing 787 Dreamliner went down seconds after takeoff and burst into flames in a residential neighborhood in India Thursday afternoon. Ramesh was then found limping through the streets of Ahmedabad, surrounded by the dead bodies of his fellow travelers and the wreckage of the doomed London-bound passenger plane. 4 British passenger Vishwash Kumar Ramesh was in 11A — an emergency exit window seat when the Boeing 787 crashed Ahmedabad, India. SeatGuru But his miraculous outcome defies studies and expert claims that the dreaded middle seat toward the rear of an aircraft is not just the safest place, but also offers the best odds if the plane goes down. Federal Aviation Administration data analyzed by Time Magazine in 2015 showed that the back third of a plane has the lowest fatality rate — but survival varies with the nature of the crash and where the aircraft absorbs the brunt of the impact. 4 Air India boarding pass for Ramesh Vishwash Kumar, flight AI171, seat 11A. 'It all depends on the crash dynamics,' Daniel Kwasi Adjekum, a University of North Dakota aviation safety researcher, told Live Science. 'Then it really matters where you are seated to be able to survive structurally.' Passengers in aisle seats in the middle section of the cabin fared the worst, with a 44% fatality rate, per the Time's study, which reviewed 35 years of FAA data. 4 Debris of the Air India plane embedded in a building after a crash. SIDDHARAJ SOLANKI/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock However, a 2008 study from the University of Greenwich found that being within five rows of an emergency exit boosted survival chances with passengers able to evacuate the plane at a quicker rate. 'There's no one-size-fits-all-answer,' Cheng-Lung Wu, a professor at the University of New South Wales, said, noting that seats close to the plane's wings have more structural protection, Live Science reported. 4 Vishwash Kumar Ramesh was the sole survivor of the deadly crash. Despite Thursday's fatal devastation, air travel remains one of the safest forms of transportation. The odds of dying on a commercial flight in the US are about 1 in 13.7 million, according to a 2024 study in the Journal of Air Transport Management. The National Transportation Safety Board also recorded that 94% of major passenger jet accidents between 2001 and 2017 had a full survival rate. The cause of Thursday's deadly crash, which also injured 41 people on the ground, is under investigation.

Air India plane crash: Briton survives as more than 290 killed in Ahmedabad
Air India plane crash: Briton survives as more than 290 killed in Ahmedabad

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Air India plane crash: Briton survives as more than 290 killed in Ahmedabad

Almost 300 people are feared dead after a plane bound for Gatwick airport crashed seconds after take-off in India. Air India Flight AI171 went down shortly after taking off from Ahmedabad airport. It crashed in a residential area that included accommodation used by doctors. Footage from the scene shows the jet flying low over buildings before it descended, with a fireball then appearing in the sky. The plane, a Boeing 787, was carrying 242 people on board, including 169 Indian nationals, 53 Britons, seven Portuguese and one Canadian. A police officer told Reuters more than 290 people were feared dead in total. Air India has confirmed 241 of the 242 people on board the plane have died, saying it "offers its deepest condolences to the families of the deceased". Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, a British national, survived. Speaking outside the family's home in Leicester, his brother said he has "no idea" how he escaped. Akeel Nanabawa, his wife Hannaa Vorajee and their four-year-old daughter Sara, who lived in Gloucester, were also on the flight, the Gloucester Muslim Community group said. Number 10 has said the public should be prepared for a significant loss of life from the "devastating" crash. King Charles has offered his condolences to the victims, while Indian PM Narendra Modhi said the crash was "heartbreaking beyond words". Tata Group, which owns Air India, has said it will offer around £85,000 to the families of each person who died. A range of theories have been suggested as the cause for the disaster, but with the investigation at an early stage, any concrete findings are likely to take days, weeks or even months to emerge. The crash is the first major accident for the Boeing 787 model, which has been in operation since 2011. Read more: 30 seconds from take-off to disaster: The doomed Air India flight in full (The Telegraph) Miracle in seat 11a: British national survives Air India plane crash disaster (The Independent) What happened to Air India Flight 171? - Aviation experts review crash video (Sky News) Devastating Air India tragedy is an exception to the trends of air safety (The Independent) Yahoo News' live coverage has ended, but you can read back through our updates below: British national Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, who is believed to be the only survivor of the Air India crash, has 'no idea' how he escaped the plane, his brother told PA outside the family's Leicester home. The Air India flight was carrying more than 240 people from the city of Ahmedabad, including 53 British nationals. Speaking outside the family home in Leicester, Vishwash's brother Nayan Kumar Ramesh, 27, said: 'We were just shocked as soon as we heard it. 'I last spoke to him yesterday morning. We're devastated, just devastated. He said 'I have no idea how I exited the plane.'" A relative called Jay added Vishwash spoke to his father after the crash and asked after his brother Ajay, who is believed to have also been on the plane. Jay told PA: 'After the crash he spoke to his dad worrying about his brother saying 'Where's Ajay?''He's got some injuries on his face. He was painted in blood. He was pretty much covered in blood that's what his dad said. He added: 'He's doing well I think. It's a big shock. I don't have many words to describe the incident.' If you're just joining us, here's what you need to know about the crash. Only one passenger has reportedly survived after a plane bound for Gatwick Airport crashed shortly after take-off in India. The Air India aircraft departed from Ahmedabad airport in Gujarat state with more than 240 people on board, including 53 British nationals, on Thursday. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner aircraft crashed in a residential area called Meghani Nagar five minutes after taking off. The airline said 169 passengers were Indian nationals, 53 were British, one was Canadian and seven were Portuguese. It is not yet known what the cause of the accident was. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the crash of a Gatwick-bound plane in India with 53 British nationals on board was 'absolutely devastating". He added that that the investigation will 'take some time'. It is not yet known what the cause of the accident was. Tim Atkinson, a former aircraft accident investigator, told BBC News: 'The field is completely open as to possible causation here.' A former pilot said the crash may have been caused by a bird strike. Saurabh Bhatnagar told Indian news TV channel New Delhi Television the incident appeared to involve 'multiple bird hits'. He said: 'It looks, prima facie, like a case of multiple bird hits wherein both the engines have lost power.' Bird strikes are defined as a collision between a bird and an aircraft which is in flight, taking off or landing. A large flock of birds entering an aircraft engine can cause power loss. Three British nationals who died in the Air India plane crash have been named. In a statement posted on Facebook, Gloucester Muslim Community said Akeel Nanabawa, his wife Hannaa and their four-year-old daughter Sara had died in the crash. The group wrote that they had "lost a true diamond of our community". The post said: 'During this moment of overwhelming sorrow, our hearts go out to all those left behind. 'No words can truly ease the pain of such a profound loss, but we pray that the family may find solace in the tremendous outpouring of compassion and solidarity from communities across the world. 'May their cherished memories provide comfort, and may they rest in eternal peace.' At least 240 people, including those on the ground, have been killed in the Air India crash, a top police officer has told Reuters. US investigators have announced they will also travel to India to assist with the crash. The National Transportation Safety Board, which assists with foreign aviation investigations, said it will pass on its findings to the government of India. The NTSB will be leading a team of US investigators travelling to India to assist the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau with its investigation into the crash of an Air India Boeing 787 in Ahmedabad, India, Thursday. — NTSB Newsroom (@NTSB_Newsroom) June 12, 2025 The former chief minister of Gujarat, Vijay Rupani, has been killed in the plane crash, India's civil aviation minister has told reporters. Rupani served as the chief minister of the western Indian state between 2016 and 2021. He was 68 years old. No10 would not confirm local reports that a British citizen had survived the crash, saying the situation was still unfolding. However, when asked if the public should prepare for a significant loss of life, a No 10 spokesman said: 'Yes. 'As the PM said this morning, the scenes emerging of the London-bound plane carrying many British nationals crashing in the Indian city at Ahmedabad are devastating. 'Clearly this is a deeply distressing time for families. The situation is still unfolding.' The survivor of the Air India plane crash has said the trouble started just thirty seconds in the flight. Forty-year-old British national Vishwash Kumar Ramesh is believed to be the only survivor of the accident, and is receiving treatment for his injuries at the Civil Hospital, Asarwa in Ahmedabad. 'It all happened so quickly,' Ramesh, who sustained injuries to his face, chest and feet, said. It is not clear how he survived, but parts of the plane appeared to be intact after the crash, he told the Hindustan Times from hospital. '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,' he added. The family of the one confirmed survivor of the Air India plane crash said they have now spoken to him. Family members confirmed to Sky News they have heard from the man, who was identified as Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, to the Hindustan Times newspaper. However, they said they have not heard from another relative believed to be on the flight. An aviation expert has said the model of the Air India plane that crashed has been considered "a safe airplane in service for many years." The accident is the first major accident for the Boeing 787 model, which has been in operation since 2011. Dr Hassan Shahidi, the CEO of the Flight Safety Network, told Yahoo News: "There is a large fleet of 787 Boeing out there in the world. I just flew one just recently out of Africa. "No one wants to see any kind of aircraft be involved in an accident. And certainly for Boeing, this is a difficult time and they will be very much ready to support the investigation as the manufacturer and aid this part of the process." Shahidi added that once it is safe to recover the black boxes from the crash site, it could take up to a month before the first findings are shared with the public. "At this point right now it's search and rescue still at the moment, even as we're approaching the very difficult nighttime there in Ahmedabad," he told Yahoo News. "We are going to need to wait and see when it's safe for investigators to actually go into the scene. "I would expect that the black boxes will be recovered because they are hardened boxes, they are hardened equipment that withstand any type of severe impact, and that is going to be crucial to the investigation. "It's very early to say, but within about a month of that, they will be able to at least provide some insight in terms of what happened." More than 100 people were killed when an Air India plane bound for London with 242 people on board crashed minutes after taking off from India's western city of Ahmedabad on Thursday, authorities said, in one of the country's worst aviation disasters. Read a roundup from Reuters on the other aviation disasters in India. Air India said it was organising two relief flights to Ahmedabad for families of the passengers involved in the plane crash and airline staff. The airline is sending return flights from Delhi and Mumbai that will arrive at 11pm local time and depart shortly after 1am on Friday. The airline said: 'Next of kin of passengers and staff in Delhi and Mumbai wanting to travel on these flights can call our hotline on 1800 5691 444. 'Additionally, those coming in from international destinations and wanting to travel can call our hotline on +91 8062779200.' A British passenger has walked away from the Air India plane crash, which happened minutes after take-off from Ahmedabad Airport, local media reported. New Delhi-based NDTV shared a video of a man walking around near the crash site with a limp but seemingly escaping any major injury. The man identified himself as Vishwash Kumar Ramesh to the Hindustan Times newspaper. He told them he heard a "loud noise" roughly 30 seconds after takeoff. "It all happened so quickly," he said, adding he had received "impact injuries" on his chest, eyes and feet. "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." Ramesh told local media he had lived in London for 20 years with his wife and child. He said his brother was on board the plane in a different row, and he asked people to help find him. Local police said Ramesh was found in seat 11A. It is yet unclear what may have caused the crash, but aviation experts have shared their knowledge based on the emerging footage of the incident. The 787 Dreamliner involved in the crash is a widebody, twin-engine plane and had a total of 256 seats on board. It is the first ever crash of a Boeing 787 aircraft, according to the Aviation Safety Network database. Read the full story from The Standard. The crash of a Boeing 787 passenger jet in India minutes after takeoff on Thursday is putting the spotlight back on a beleaguered manufacturer though it was not immediately clear why the plane crashed. The Air India 787 went down in the northwestern city of Ahmedabad with more than 240 people aboard shortly after takeoff, authorities said. It was the first fatal crash since the plane, also known as the Dreamliner, went into service in 2009, according to the Aviation Safety Network database. Boeing shares fell more than 5% in pre-market trading. Read the full story from AP. Tata Group, which owns Air India, will offer around £85,000 to the families of each person who died in the Ahmedabad plane crash, the company said. A statement from Tata Sons and Tata Group chairman Natarajan Chandrasekaran, posted to X, said: "We will also cover the medical expenses of those injured and ensure that they receive all necessary care and support. Additionally, we will provide support in the building up of the B J Medical's hostel. "We remain steadfast in standing with the affected families and communities during this unimaginable time." The Air India flight crashed into the B J Medical hostel, which houses young doctors, causing severe damage. We are deeply anguished by the tragic event involving Air India Flight 171. No words can adequately express the grief we feel at this moment. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families who have lost their loved ones, and with those who have been injured. Tata Group will… — Tata Group (@TataCompanies) June 12, 2025 Campbell Wilson, the chief executive of Air India, has expressed his 'deep sorrow' after the London-bound plane crashed. Message from Campbell Wilson, MD & CEO, Air India. — Air India (@airindia) June 12, 2025 Two people have been found alive following the Air India plane crash, Reuters reported. Police have found one survivor from the flight, with another found in the hospital and under treatment, according to the Ani news agency. British national Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, who is believed to be the only survivor of the Air India crash, has 'no idea' how he escaped the plane, his brother told PA outside the family's Leicester home. The Air India flight was carrying more than 240 people from the city of Ahmedabad, including 53 British nationals. Speaking outside the family home in Leicester, Vishwash's brother Nayan Kumar Ramesh, 27, said: 'We were just shocked as soon as we heard it. 'I last spoke to him yesterday morning. We're devastated, just devastated. He said 'I have no idea how I exited the plane.'" A relative called Jay added Vishwash spoke to his father after the crash and asked after his brother Ajay, who is believed to have also been on the plane. Jay told PA: 'After the crash he spoke to his dad worrying about his brother saying 'Where's Ajay?''He's got some injuries on his face. He was painted in blood. He was pretty much covered in blood that's what his dad said. He added: 'He's doing well I think. It's a big shock. I don't have many words to describe the incident.' If you're just joining us, here's what you need to know about the crash. Only one passenger has reportedly survived after a plane bound for Gatwick Airport crashed shortly after take-off in India. The Air India aircraft departed from Ahmedabad airport in Gujarat state with more than 240 people on board, including 53 British nationals, on Thursday. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner aircraft crashed in a residential area called Meghani Nagar five minutes after taking off. The airline said 169 passengers were Indian nationals, 53 were British, one was Canadian and seven were Portuguese. It is not yet known what the cause of the accident was. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the crash of a Gatwick-bound plane in India with 53 British nationals on board was 'absolutely devastating". He added that that the investigation will 'take some time'. It is not yet known what the cause of the accident was. Tim Atkinson, a former aircraft accident investigator, told BBC News: 'The field is completely open as to possible causation here.' A former pilot said the crash may have been caused by a bird strike. Saurabh Bhatnagar told Indian news TV channel New Delhi Television the incident appeared to involve 'multiple bird hits'. He said: 'It looks, prima facie, like a case of multiple bird hits wherein both the engines have lost power.' Bird strikes are defined as a collision between a bird and an aircraft which is in flight, taking off or landing. A large flock of birds entering an aircraft engine can cause power loss. Three British nationals who died in the Air India plane crash have been named. In a statement posted on Facebook, Gloucester Muslim Community said Akeel Nanabawa, his wife Hannaa and their four-year-old daughter Sara had died in the crash. The group wrote that they had "lost a true diamond of our community". The post said: 'During this moment of overwhelming sorrow, our hearts go out to all those left behind. 'No words can truly ease the pain of such a profound loss, but we pray that the family may find solace in the tremendous outpouring of compassion and solidarity from communities across the world. 'May their cherished memories provide comfort, and may they rest in eternal peace.' At least 240 people, including those on the ground, have been killed in the Air India crash, a top police officer has told Reuters. US investigators have announced they will also travel to India to assist with the crash. The National Transportation Safety Board, which assists with foreign aviation investigations, said it will pass on its findings to the government of India. The NTSB will be leading a team of US investigators travelling to India to assist the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau with its investigation into the crash of an Air India Boeing 787 in Ahmedabad, India, Thursday. — NTSB Newsroom (@NTSB_Newsroom) June 12, 2025 The former chief minister of Gujarat, Vijay Rupani, has been killed in the plane crash, India's civil aviation minister has told reporters. Rupani served as the chief minister of the western Indian state between 2016 and 2021. He was 68 years old. No10 would not confirm local reports that a British citizen had survived the crash, saying the situation was still unfolding. However, when asked if the public should prepare for a significant loss of life, a No 10 spokesman said: 'Yes. 'As the PM said this morning, the scenes emerging of the London-bound plane carrying many British nationals crashing in the Indian city at Ahmedabad are devastating. 'Clearly this is a deeply distressing time for families. The situation is still unfolding.' The survivor of the Air India plane crash has said the trouble started just thirty seconds in the flight. Forty-year-old British national Vishwash Kumar Ramesh is believed to be the only survivor of the accident, and is receiving treatment for his injuries at the Civil Hospital, Asarwa in Ahmedabad. 'It all happened so quickly,' Ramesh, who sustained injuries to his face, chest and feet, said. It is not clear how he survived, but parts of the plane appeared to be intact after the crash, he told the Hindustan Times from hospital. '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,' he added. The family of the one confirmed survivor of the Air India plane crash said they have now spoken to him. Family members confirmed to Sky News they have heard from the man, who was identified as Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, to the Hindustan Times newspaper. However, they said they have not heard from another relative believed to be on the flight. An aviation expert has said the model of the Air India plane that crashed has been considered "a safe airplane in service for many years." The accident is the first major accident for the Boeing 787 model, which has been in operation since 2011. Dr Hassan Shahidi, the CEO of the Flight Safety Network, told Yahoo News: "There is a large fleet of 787 Boeing out there in the world. I just flew one just recently out of Africa. "No one wants to see any kind of aircraft be involved in an accident. And certainly for Boeing, this is a difficult time and they will be very much ready to support the investigation as the manufacturer and aid this part of the process." Shahidi added that once it is safe to recover the black boxes from the crash site, it could take up to a month before the first findings are shared with the public. "At this point right now it's search and rescue still at the moment, even as we're approaching the very difficult nighttime there in Ahmedabad," he told Yahoo News. "We are going to need to wait and see when it's safe for investigators to actually go into the scene. "I would expect that the black boxes will be recovered because they are hardened boxes, they are hardened equipment that withstand any type of severe impact, and that is going to be crucial to the investigation. "It's very early to say, but within about a month of that, they will be able to at least provide some insight in terms of what happened." More than 100 people were killed when an Air India plane bound for London with 242 people on board crashed minutes after taking off from India's western city of Ahmedabad on Thursday, authorities said, in one of the country's worst aviation disasters. Read a roundup from Reuters on the other aviation disasters in India. Air India said it was organising two relief flights to Ahmedabad for families of the passengers involved in the plane crash and airline staff. The airline is sending return flights from Delhi and Mumbai that will arrive at 11pm local time and depart shortly after 1am on Friday. The airline said: 'Next of kin of passengers and staff in Delhi and Mumbai wanting to travel on these flights can call our hotline on 1800 5691 444. 'Additionally, those coming in from international destinations and wanting to travel can call our hotline on +91 8062779200.' A British passenger has walked away from the Air India plane crash, which happened minutes after take-off from Ahmedabad Airport, local media reported. New Delhi-based NDTV shared a video of a man walking around near the crash site with a limp but seemingly escaping any major injury. The man identified himself as Vishwash Kumar Ramesh to the Hindustan Times newspaper. He told them he heard a "loud noise" roughly 30 seconds after takeoff. "It all happened so quickly," he said, adding he had received "impact injuries" on his chest, eyes and feet. "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." Ramesh told local media he had lived in London for 20 years with his wife and child. He said his brother was on board the plane in a different row, and he asked people to help find him. Local police said Ramesh was found in seat 11A. It is yet unclear what may have caused the crash, but aviation experts have shared their knowledge based on the emerging footage of the incident. The 787 Dreamliner involved in the crash is a widebody, twin-engine plane and had a total of 256 seats on board. It is the first ever crash of a Boeing 787 aircraft, according to the Aviation Safety Network database. Read the full story from The Standard. The crash of a Boeing 787 passenger jet in India minutes after takeoff on Thursday is putting the spotlight back on a beleaguered manufacturer though it was not immediately clear why the plane crashed. The Air India 787 went down in the northwestern city of Ahmedabad with more than 240 people aboard shortly after takeoff, authorities said. It was the first fatal crash since the plane, also known as the Dreamliner, went into service in 2009, according to the Aviation Safety Network database. Boeing shares fell more than 5% in pre-market trading. Read the full story from AP. Tata Group, which owns Air India, will offer around £85,000 to the families of each person who died in the Ahmedabad plane crash, the company said. A statement from Tata Sons and Tata Group chairman Natarajan Chandrasekaran, posted to X, said: "We will also cover the medical expenses of those injured and ensure that they receive all necessary care and support. Additionally, we will provide support in the building up of the B J Medical's hostel. "We remain steadfast in standing with the affected families and communities during this unimaginable time." The Air India flight crashed into the B J Medical hostel, which houses young doctors, causing severe damage. We are deeply anguished by the tragic event involving Air India Flight 171. No words can adequately express the grief we feel at this moment. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families who have lost their loved ones, and with those who have been injured. Tata Group will… — Tata Group (@TataCompanies) June 12, 2025 Campbell Wilson, the chief executive of Air India, has expressed his 'deep sorrow' after the London-bound plane crashed. Message from Campbell Wilson, MD & CEO, Air India. — Air India (@airindia) June 12, 2025 Two people have been found alive following the Air India plane crash, Reuters reported. Police have found one survivor from the flight, with another found in the hospital and under treatment, according to the Ani news agency.

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