
'I was scared. I stood up and ran': Survivor of Air India crash reportedly jumped out of emergency exit, Asia News
NEW DELHI - Ramesh Viswashkumar, the only known survivor out of the 242 people onboard an Air India plane that crashed in Ahmedabad on Thursday, had been sitting near an emergency exit of the London-bound flight and managed to jump out, police said.
Speaking from his hospital bed, the 40-year-old told Indian media that he was a British national and was travelling to Britain with his brother after visiting family in India.
"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," Viswashkumar told the Hindustan Times.
It was not clear whether Viswashkumar managed to jump out before the plane made impact.
Social media footage shown on Indian news channels showed a man in a bloodstained white t-shirt and dark pants limping on a street and being helped by a medic. The man had bruises on his face and a goatee beard, resembling photographs of Viswashkumar in hospital after the crash that were published by local media.
Reuters could not immediately verify the video, in which people gathered around the man and asked him where were the other passengers, to which he replied "they're all inside".
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A photo of Viswashkumar's boarding pass shown online by the Hindustan Times showed that he was seated in seat 11A of the plane bound for Gatwick Airport.
He told the paper his brother Ajay had been seated in a different row on the plane and asked for help to find him.
"He was near the emergency exit and managed to escape by jumping out the emergency door," said Vidhi Chaudhary, a senior police officer in Ahmedabad, speaking about Viswashkumar.
A member of Viswashkumar's family based in Britain, who requested anonymity, told Reuters over the phone that he had survived and that the family was in touch with him, but declined to share further details.
Ajay Valgi, a cousin of Viswashkumar who lives in Leicester, central England, told the BBC that Viswashkumar spoke by phone to confirm he was all right. "He only said that he was fine, nothing else," Valgi said.
Valgi said the family had not heard anything about his brother. "We're not doing well. We're all upset," he said.
Viswashkumar is married with one child, a boy, he added.
The aircraft came down in a residential area, crashing into a medical college hostel outside the airport during lunch time, in the world's worst aviation disaster in a decade.
More than 240 people were killed in the crash. The dead included some on the ground. Police said a previously shared death toll of 294 was wrong due to some double-counted body parts.
Police said Viswashkumar was the sole passenger known so far to have survived but added that rescue operations were still ongoing.
"Chances are that there might be more survivors among the injured who are being treated in the hospital," Chaudhary said.
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Straits Times
6 hours ago
- Straits Times
Anxious families await dental identification of Air India crash victims
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Straits Times
7 hours ago
- Straits Times
‘My mind is just not ready to accept it': Families of Air India crash victims grapple with loss, grief and shock
Ms Payel Thakor's mother, who works as a cook at the hostel mess the plane had rammed into, and two-year-old niece have been missing since the crash. ST PHOTOS: DEBARSHI DASGUPTA 'My mind is just not ready to accept it': Families of Air India crash victims grapple with loss, grief and shock Follow our live coverage here. – An agonising wait for family members of passengers aboard the ill-fated Air India flight AI171 continues to unfold on the sprawling campus of the Civil Hospital in Ahmedabad, a day after the plane headed for London crashed in this western Indian city. All but one of the 242 passengers and crew on board were killed, with an additional unconfirmed number of fatalities feared on the ground. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner had rammed into a hostel mess for doctors studying and working at the city's Byramjee Jeejeebhoy Medical College and Civil Hospital. 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Among those waiting to get into the crash site that morning were volunteers with portable pet carriers from Darshna Animal Welfare (DAW), a local organisation, who hoped to rescue animals injured in the tragedy. They reported at least 11 dead dogs at the site the day before, when they saved three others and five scarred birds. 'We should care for them (animals) as well. Saving them is also our responsibility,' says Mr Akash Chavda, 32, DAW's founder. Debarshi Dasgupta is The Straits Times' India correspondent covering the country and other parts of South Asia. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
7 hours ago
- Straits Times
Lunch plates abandoned, plane parts embedded in walls after Air India jet hit doctors' hostel
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