
British Air India crash survivor reveals how he 'just walked out' out of burning plane moments before it EXPLODED - as he admits it's a 'miracle' he escaped with 'minor injuries'
The sole survivor of the British Air India disaster has revealed how he 'just walked out' of the burning plane as he admitted it is a 'miracle' that he has been left with only minor injuries.
British national Viswash Kumar Ramesh, 40, said that he was in India with his brother for the best part of a year and was returning to London, where his family live, on the Gatwick-bound aircraft on Thursday.
He was seated in 11A on the doomed flight from Ahmedabad, which is said to be one of the worst in India's aviation history, having claimed the lives of 279 people so far.
Among the victims believed to be dead, which includes 53 British nationals, is the 40-year-old's brother Ajay Kumar, 35, who was sat on the other side of the aisle in seat 11J perished in the fireball explosion.
Vishwash, who is being treated at the Civil Hospital in Ahmedabad, just a short distance from where the plane crashed into buildings, has spoken of the moment he escaped from the burning plane.
While sitting up on a hospital bed, he told DD India that he was 'feeling better than yesterday' and that the 'treatment is going good'.
Still in shock, he admitted he 'can't explain' everything that he witnessed as the plane plummeted to the ground.
He managed to escape after his side of the plane fell onto the ground of a floor building, forcing his way out of the plane past a broken door, before being assisted by locals and taken to hospital in an ambulance.
'The emergency door was broken, my seat is broken,' he said.
Asked if he escaped the plane by jumping to the ground, he replied: 'I am not jumping. I just walked out innit.'
'It's a miracle,' he said when discussing his survival and injuries.
His doctor added: 'He is having minor injuries only. He has some abrasions over his left forearm and swelling over left eyelid and over the eyes.
'Chest and abdomen is clear, no lung fractures present. The patient is vitally stable.'
He added Vishwash had not complained of nausea, vomiting or any sort of fever.
It is now anticipated to be released in the next 48 hours, his relatives have said.
Jigar Chunilal, who has been at his bedside since he was filmed walking away from the crash site dazed and bloodied, said: 'Not only is it a miracle that he survived but it's also a miracle that he had no serious injuries. He's still very shocked that he's still alive and so are we.
'The doctors have told us that he can go home within the next two days and that is incredible, but we are not sure when he will be leaving for the UK. He suffered some minor burns but no fractures, broken bones or any serious internal injuries.'
Mr Ramesh's parents, Manibhai and Bava, wife Hiral and two brothers, Sunnykumar and Nayankumar are expected to arrive in Ahmedabad over the weekend to visit him after leaving the UK on Friday night.
Mr Chunilal added: 'We don't want to say too much because this is a very difficult time for us all. On one hand we are very happy that Viswashkumar survived but at the same time we are in mourning for Ajay.'
He added that as per Hindu custom, the family are keen to carry out Ajay's funeral as quickly as possible and will not return to the UK until this is done.
Earlier today, UK investigators with experience in aircraft operations, engineering and recorded data, arrived in the south Asian country in the wake of the tragedy.
Terrifying CCTV footage showed the Boeing 787 Dreamliner careen to the ground shortly after take off in the densely populated Meghani area of the city at around 1.40pm local time (8.10am BST).
Detailing the moments after the crash, Viswash described seeing several passengers and crew lose their lives as parts of the plane were scattered around the site.
Still clutching his boarding pass at the hospital, he called his father in the aftermath of the tragedy. His brother Nyan told Sky News: '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'.'
Devastatingly, injured Viswash had been begging from his hospital bed: 'Find Ajay, you must find Ajay.'
His cousin, Ajay Valgi, told the BBC, how Viswash has a wife and 'little boy' at home: adding: 'He only said that he's fine, nothing else. [We are] happy that he's OK, but we're still upset about the other brother.'
Previously said of his younger cousin's, Ajay's death, Mr Valgi: 'I'm feeling absolutely upset. He's not just my cousin, he's also one of my best friends as well.
'They were sitting next to each other, but we don't know what happened to [Ajay Kumar]. We're not doing well. We're all upset.'
On Thursday, relatives gathered at the family's terraced home in Leicester to comfort the brothers' mother who is said to be too grief-stricken to speak.
'It's a miracle at least one of them survived,' younger brother Nayan said.
'He said his plane had crashed and he couldn't find anyone, we couldn't believe it. There was blood running down his face.
The tragedy's death toll has since increased to 279 dead, according to a senior Indian police source, making it one of the deadliest plane disasters of the 21st century.
This is a further increase on an earlier figure of 265 victims, which includes those on the plane and ground.
Viswash lying in hospital with a bloodied face and injuries after the tragic crash, which claimed the life of his younger brother
The siblings had been a few seats apart onboard the plane, with survivor Viswash sat at 11A and his younger brother positioned at 11J on the other side of the aisle
Air India said there were 242 people on board the London-bound flight, with only one survivor, with at least 38 people killed on the ground when the plane smashed into residential buildings.
The official casualty number will not be finalised until the slow process of DNA identification is completed.
The UK's Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) announced on Friday night that four of its investigators had arrived in India and have expertise in aircraft operations, engineering and recorded data.
The 'release of information on the investigation rests solely with the Indian authorities', it added.
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.
MailOnline previously revealed the British victims were Akeel Nanawaba, Hannaa Vorajee and their daughter Sarah, 4, Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek, Javed Ali Syed, his wife and two children, Raxa Modha, her grandson Rudra and her daughter-in-law Yasha Kamdar, and Ajay Kumar Ramesh, the brother of the tragedy's only survivor.
Relatives of Harrods ambassador Mariam Ali Syed, 35, her husband Javed - a manager at the Best Western Kensington Olympia Hotel - have spoken out since the tragedy.
The couple's children Zayn, five, and Amani, four, are believed to be the youngest named victims of the crash so far.
Mrs Ali Syed's sister-in-law, Yasmine Hassan, 45, broke down while confirming the children's names, and pleaded with officials to offer more support to the families of the 53 British citizens onboard the flight.
'They are so small, they are five and four. And it's just thinking how scared they must have been,' she told the Telegraph.
'We're not angry about the lack of answers [from UK government officials] – we understand that takes time.
'We're angry because no one has reached out to offer support or even ask if we need anything. These are British citizens.'
Adam Taju, 72, and his wife Hasina, 70, were flying back to the UK with their son-in-law Altafhusen Patel, 51, when they lost their lives in the tragedy,
The four had been spending time with Mr Taju's 96-year-old father in India to celebrate Eid, their son Altaf Taju told MailOnline.
'He's the one they wanted to see because he's 96 and it's very hot in India. No one goes to India this time of year but they said 'We don't know how long he's going to be around, let's go and celebrate Eid.'
Altaf added: 'I'm the eldest person in the family now. I'm here with my sisters. I'm flying out with my two sisters. The other one can't make it as she's a cancer patient.
Adam was a retired machinist who'd worked making leather coats and Hasina had been a housewife.
The couple, who had lived in a terraced property in Ilford since the 1970s, had four children, a boy and three girls. One of their daughters who lives has since flown back to Redbridge to be with family.
Raxa Modha (left) was on the doomed flight so tragically died in the crash on Thursday
Adam's son, Altaf Taju, told the Mail the family hoped to be flying out to India by Sunday, so they could conduct the burials next week.
Mr Taju, who is from Blackburn, said he'd travelled down to London to support his sister Shamim who was married to Altafhusen Patel.
Mr Taju said: 'I'm okay. I'm the eldest son of the family. My uncle rang me to tell me what had happened.
'We've lost three members of my family and my brother in law who's married to my sister. My sister is alone here.'
Explaining how burials of his family members will take place in their respective home villages, his mother and father in Sansrod, Gujarat, and his brother-in-law in Bharuch, Mr Taju called for the release of the bodies.
'We need to get the release of the bodies and bring them home and start mourning in the Islamic way, whatever is left of them,' he said.
'I have told them to wait for us, until we get there, because I want to put them down in the grave.'
Friend and neighbour Iqbal Hussain, 44, who has known Adam and Hasina since he was a child, described them as a 'smiling' and 'loving family'.
A view of the site where a plane crashed shortly after takeoff from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport in India's western state of Gujarat on June 12, 2025
'It's a sad thing. They were happy when they left [to go to India]. They were going on holiday to celebrate Eid,' he said.
'They were part of the Neighbourhood Watch group. We're all devastated.
'Anything they needed we'd help them with. They weren't very IT savvy and I used to help them out,' the IT manager added: 'We grew up with their children. I was friends with Afia, their youngest daughter.'
Recalling the moment his local councillor who's from the Gujarat community informed him of the plane crash, as well as Adam and Hasina being on board, Mr Hussain said: ''I thought 'That cannot be true'.
'I called the youngest daughter [Afia]. She was crying. She didn't say much. All she said was 'Say prayers for my parents'. She was hoping they were okay and alive.'
Councillor Salim Patel described Adam as 'a wonderful man, a community man', who was 'always out and about supporting communities'.
'He will be very missed,' he said: 'It will take a very long time for this community to accept he's not there. It's a great loss, to lose him as a human being.
'Whatever the community needed he would stand up with the community, whether it was to help campaign against fly-tipping or help people in need during Covid.
Adam was described as 'a wonderful man, a community man', who was 'always out and about supporting communities'.
Among those believed to have died is Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, left, and First Officer Clive Kunder, right
Read More
Heartbreak as youngest named victims of Air India crash so far are revealed to be in British family
'Whenever I needed his support, he would be there.
'He was a kind and humble gentleman. There are no words to describe how we are going to miss him. I've known him for nearly 30 years.
The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner issued a mayday call moments before it crashed around lunchtime on Thursday after lifting barely 100 metres (330 feet) from the ground.
Investigators have also since recovered a black box recorder on Friday from the crash site, with forensic teams still looking for the second.
US planemaker Boeing said it was in touch with Air India and stood 'ready to support them' over the incident, which a source close to the case said was the first crash for a 787 Dreamliner.
It comes as an aviation expert believes the co-pilot on Air India flight AI171 pulled the plane's wing flaps instead of retracting the landing gear, causing the plane to crash.
Commercial airline pilot and YouTuber Captain Steve, who analyzes plane crashes and close calls, gave his theory on the incident which killed 241 people on board.
The London -bound 787 Dreamliner began losing height moments after take-off and crashed in a fireball over a residential area in the Ahmedabad, Gujarat.
Steve said he suspected there had been an exceptionally simple error in the cockpit when the co-pilot was asked to retract the landing gear, with devastating consequences.
He said: 'Here's what I think happened, again folks this is just my opinion. I think the pilot flying said to the co-pilot said 'gear up' at the appropriate time.
Wreckage of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner lies at the site where the Air India plane crashed in Ahmedabad, India, June 12, 2025
Rescuers work at the site of an airplane that crashed in India's northwestern city of Ahmedabad in Gujarat state, Thursday, June12, 2025
The tail of the Dreamliner plane that crashed, hitting buildings in a residential area
Remnants of the fuselage and the landing gear were seen dangling through a gaping hole in the side of what appeared to be a canteen, with half-finished plates of food clearly visible on benches inside
Parts of the jet appeared to have smashed into the BJ Medical College and Civil Hospital
Read More
Expert's theory on simple mistake he thinks Air India co-pilot made that caused crash and killed 265
'I think the co-pilot grabbed the flap handle and raised the flaps, instead of the gear. If that happened, this explains a lot of why this airplane stopped flying.'
Steve said that the flaps being raised would cause the flight to lose airspeed and altitude quickly, something he thinks the pilot would have struggled to control.
He explained his theory by saying the 787's composite wings would normally bend during take off as lift forces take it into the air.
But the Air India plane appears to show no such bending, amid widespread speculation the flaps which help lift the plane off had accidentally been retracted.
It remains unclear what caused Thursday's tragedy, with mechanical failure or pilot error among the possible causes that investigators will now work to identify.
Among those believed to have died is Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, the pilot operating the Boeing 787.
Mr Sabharwal, who had 8,200 hours of experience, was named as the pilot of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner.
First Officer Clive Kunder, from Mumbai and who was co-piloting, had logged 1,100 of flying hours and completed his training at the Florida-based Paris Air Flight School.
King Charles III and other members of the royal family wore black armbands and there was a moment of silence during his annual birthday parade on Saturday as the monarch commemorates those who died in this week's Air India plane crash.
Charles requested the symbolic moves 'as a mark of respect for the lives lost, the families in mourning and all the communities affected by this awful tragedy,' Buckingham Palace said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Air India plane crash death toll rises to 270
Doctors in India say 270 bodies have been recovered from the site of Thursday's plane crash in London-bound aircraft crashed into a residential area shortly after take-off killing all but one of the 242 passengers, a 40-year-old British have been trying to establish how many people were killed on the ground and have been continuing the slow process of matching DNA samples to confirm the victims' identities. Vigils honouring the dead have taken place across India and the UK.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
From coastal roots in East Yorkshire to living a Royal Park life
His passion started with a cacti collection in an East Yorkshire seaside town but it has led Matthew Pottage to the grandeur of London's historic Royal Parks and a new garden dedicated to Elizabeth II, as Jo Makel reports. They are among the most famous green spaces in the world – Hyde Park, St James's, Richmond and Regent's - names we know, even if we've never has eight Royal Parks and, as head of horticulture and landscape strategy, Matthew Pottage is the man who oversees what grows in them."The bones of the landscapes are amazing," he says. "The scale, the age and the history is so exciting."The 5,000 acres are varied. Some are sites of special scientific interest while others are immersive green spaces in the most central of city settings. With the BT Tower visible through the trees, we are breathing in the rain-enriched scent of the traditional Queen Mary rose garden in The Regent's Park, with its panoramic views of the London skyline, has oak trees which are almost 800 years old. Matthew's own history is partly why I have travelled down from East Yorkshire. His interest in gardening was inspired by his grandmother, growing houseplants and cacti in the coastal town of still pays regular visits to his home town. His parents live there and he enjoys introducing them to unusual plants, able to withstand the salt-laden winds and increasing winter he was a gardening star from an early trained at Bishop Burton College, near Beverley, where aged 17, he had his first experience of media attention as the youngest-ever finalist in the Young Horticulturalist of the Year his career soon flourished by becoming the Royal Horticultural Society's youngest curator at its flagship garden, Wisley and a regular expert on Radio 4's Gardener's Question Time. Still in his 30s, Matthew moved to the Royal Parks and a newly created role. Despite the name and history, they are charity funded – costing around £65m a year to manage with only 15% coming from Government."The charity saw an opportunity to improve the horticulture right across the parks so there is quite a pressure," says Matthew."And where you're not following someone who has already done it, you are forging your own way, building new relationships. It's a big challenge."But it is one he relishes, not least because he believes in the vital importance of green spaces in cities."Not everyone can afford their own garden or even balcony. And we knew through the Covid pandemic, people's need to be in nature and surrounded by plants is so important."We're understanding more the connection between nature and our mental health."Keen to make his own mark, Matthew has ambitions to introduce a wider range of plants as well as improve sustainability and resilience."The climate's changed a lot and that gives challenges and opportunities. We can surprise people and do things on a scale," he saysAnd it seems to be working with a Mediterranean garden, featuring huge succulents and giant-headed alliums, thriving in the capital's warm micro-climate. Arriving at the tennis courts we pause at a row of unassuming trial beds which line one side of the fence. But it's a new way of gardening for a special and other buildings have been demolished and a brownfield site in Regent's Park is being transformed into two acres of new garden dedicated to Elizabeth explains: "Rather than ship off all the concrete and all the hardcore that's on that site, we've crushed it, returned it into the soil and we're going to have quite a resilient garden embracing these materials.."Growing in crushed concrete means a really high pH, fierce drainage and there are some plants that are capable of growing successfully in it. But for peace of mind we wanted to do some tests ourselves."Resilient planting is one he feels reflects the late queen's character and other aspects of her life are planned too."She loved lily of the valley, it was in her wedding bouquet. She was a big fan of magnolia trees. And there will be exotic non-native plants to represent the Commonwealth." The project, announced in 2023, had already been designed and started before Matthew arrived but he's contributed to some of the Charles III has seen the plans and there's been input from the head gardeners at Buckingham Palace and Windsor is excited to see it come together in time for what would have been the late queen's 100th birthday next year."It's being part of a new legacy. The late queen was so significant and this is in central London. So for all of us, it's really quite a buzz." Listen to highlights from Hull and East Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Prayers held across South East for Air India crash victims
Prayers are being held across the South East for people who died in the Air India plane crash on Thursday.A temple in Gravesend, Kent, is holding a memorial service on Sunday to remember the of Om Mandir Hindu Temple, Abnash Sareen, said the memorial service aims to "bring the community together".He added: "It was absolutely tragic what happened on Thursday. When I saw the news I just couldn't believe my eyes." The Air India flight AI171, which was bound for Gatwick, crashed shortly after taking off from Ahmedabad India confirmed at least 241 people died while only one survived and India's civil aviation minister has said a black box has been found at the crash Sareen said following the news of the crash, members of the community came to the temple on Thursday to mourn those who died. "Many people, including myself, had tears in our eyes, we just couldn't believe what had happened," he said."Even if you didn't know the people who died in the crash, it is still extremely upsetting."Mr Sareen hopes the memorial service on Sunday will help the community heal."We want to let people know we stick together during difficult times," he added. 'Closer to home' Shyam Govinda, who represents the ISKCON (International Society for Krishna Consciousness) community in Crawley, told BBC Sussex people were "shocked" and "devastated" by the news."Many people are affected by it, our community especially because of the proximity of the airport to Crawley," he said. "There is a large Gujarati community here, many of us have family members and friends in Ahmedabad so the tragedy seems a lot closer to home."A special prayer session will be held on Sunday at 17:00 BST at the Bhakti Yoga Centre.