logo
Mum killed in Air India crash was ‘reluctant to go' and feared leaving her son

Mum killed in Air India crash was ‘reluctant to go' and feared leaving her son

BreakingNews.ie14 hours ago

A mother who died in the Air India plane crash had been reluctant to travel and feared leaving her young son behind for the first time, a colleague has said.
Abdhiben Patel, known as Abdhi, 40, was killed when flight AI171 crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad on Thursday.
Advertisement
She had flown to India just two weeks earlier to care for her elderly mother, but was hesitant to make the trip and leave her eight-year-old son behind.
'She didn't want to go,' said Atif Karim, 45, her colleague and close friend at Zone Beauty Studio in Northampton.
'She told me, 'I just don't like being away from him'. It was her first time leaving him, and she was very nervous.'
'She wasn't excited,' he added.
Advertisement
'It was a sense of duty. Her mum was unwell, but you could tell it was weighing on her.'
Mr Karim, a father of two, said recent tensions between India and Pakistan, which led to flight cancellations and uncertainty, had added to Mrs Patel's worries.
'All the flights were getting cancelled,' he said. 'It didn't feel like the right time.'
Because her husband Pankaj worked night shifts, Mrs Patel was inseparable from their son Meer, he said.
Advertisement
'She kept saying how shy and reserved he is, how attached they were,' he added.
'She was totally devoted to him – her entire world revolved around him.'
Mrs Patel had planned to return to work on Saturday.
The day before the crash, she had messaged Mr Karim to check in about a task and offer to help finish it remotely.
Advertisement
'She said, 'Do you want me to finish that?' and later, 'Don't worry, I'll sort it,'' he said. 'That was the last I heard.'
Originally from Gujarat, she moved to the UK in 2012 and joined the salon in 2016.
She worked her way up over the years and had been managing the business for the last three.
'She was the most diligent, reliable worker I've ever had,' Mr Karim said. 'But more than that, she was our friend.'
Advertisement
'She was bubbly, kind, always smiling – she had a way of putting people at ease and always took a genuine interest in their lives.'
'She got on with everyone and left a real mark on the people she worked with and the customers she served.
'Yesterday, we had people coming in and crying their eyes out.'
Inside the salon, he said the mood has changed, Mr Karim said.
'There's no music playing anymore,' he said.
'The staff are devastated. My colleague burst into tears when she walked in.
'Everyone's just heartbroken.'
Mrs Patel's husband and son are now in India, where efforts are still ongoing to identify victims and return remains to grieving families.
Authorities have since begun handing over remains after identifying some through DNA testing.
The Boeing 787 Dreamliner had crashed into a residential area shortly after take-off, killing 241 people on board and at least 29 on the ground.
Only one passenger – a 40-year-old British man – survived.
A fundraiser has since been launched to support Mrs Patel's grieving husband and son, raising more than £4,000 in its first few days.
The campaign is hoping to reach £50,000.
To donate, visit
the Go Fund Me campaign page
.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Air India plane crash latest: First funerals held as 30 bodies handed to grieving families
Air India plane crash latest: First funerals held as 30 bodies handed to grieving families

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Air India plane crash latest: First funerals held as 30 bodies handed to grieving families

Funerals were held in Ahmedabad for some of the Air India plane crash victims as authorities handed over their bodies to grieving families. DNA tests have also identified 80 victims of one of the deadliest plane crashes in decades. Indian aviation officials have confirmed that the final words of the pilot of the doomed Air India Flight 171, moments before the plane crashed into buildings near Ahmedabad 's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport, were Mayday distress calls. 'Thrust not achieved... falling... Mayday! Mayday! Mayday!' the pilot said before the catastrophic crash that killed at least 270 people on Thursday. The Boeing Dreamliner, with 242 people on board bound for Gatwick Airport, began losing height seconds after take-off and erupted in a fireball as it hit buildings, in what has been the world's worst aviation disaster in a decade. India Boeing 787s being operated by local carriers to be inspected. The company said it will provide an interim payment of Rs2.5m (£21,000) each to the families of the deceased and to the survivor, to help address immediate financial needs, in addition to Rs10m (£85,000) in support announced previously by the Tata Group. Air India pilot's last words moments before aircraft crashed to the ground revealed The final words of the pilot of the Air India flight that crashed have been revealed, providing new details about the final moments before the aircraft went down. Indian aviation officials have confirmed the pilot issued distress calls before the Gatwick -bound flight crashed in Gujarat state on Thursday (12 June), killing 241 people on board and at least 29 on the ground. The London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner struck a medical college hostel in a residential area of the northwestern city of Ahmedabad minutes after takeoff on Thursday. One passenger survived. Air India pilot's last words moments before aircraft crashed to the ground revealed The Gatwick-bound flight crashed and killed 241 people on board shortly after takeoff in Ahmedabad Tom Watling16 June 2025 04:00 Seven killed after helicopter carrying Hindu pilgrims crashes in Indian Himalayan state Seven killed after helicopter carrying Hindu pilgrims crashes in northern India state Helicopter was heading to Hindu pilgrimage site of Kedarnath Tom Watling16 June 2025 03:00 Young girls orphaned after father dies in Air India plane crash on way back from scattering wife's ashes Girls orphaned as father dies in Air India crash weeks after mother's death Arjun Patoliya had travelled to India to hold a funeral for his wife Bharti who died from cancer just weeks earlier Tom Watling16 June 2025 02:00 'Why me?' Six extraordinary stories of sole plane crash survivors after British man walks away from India Air disaster The startling stories of six plane crash sole survivors after India Air tragedy After Viswashkumar Ramesh somehow survived the Air India plane crash that killed everyone else on board, Alex Ross takes a look at other lone survivors and how it changed their lives for ever Tom Watling16 June 2025 01:00 The questions behind the Air India plane crash: What caused it and what happens next? At least 270 people have been confirmed dead after an Air India flight bound for London crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad, India, on Thursday, in what is now the world's deadliest air disaster in a decade. The Boeing 787 Dreamliner departed from Ahmedabad airport in the western state of Gujarat at 1.39pm local time (8.09am BST). But after issuing a mayday call, it crashed into a residential area called Meghani Nagar just five minutes after taking off, India's civil aviation authority confirmed. The questions behind the Air India plane crash: What caused it and what happens next? British man sole survivor from Boeing 787 Dreamliner carrying 242 people Tom Watling16 June 2025 00:00 Watch | Relatives wait to collect bodies of loved ones Jabed Ahmed15 June 2025 23:03 Air India crash likely to trigger India's biggest aviation insurance payout Air India crash likely to trigger India's biggest aviation insurance payout The total liability could range from £166m to £220m, according to estimates Tom Watling15 June 2025 23:00 'My grandson was burnt alive': Grief engulfs neighbourhood where Air India crash killed dozens on the ground Grief hangs heavy in Meghani Nagar in Ahmedabad, as the wreckage of a London‑bound Air India Boeing 787 Dreamliner lies smouldering in the compound of BJ Medical College. The devastating crash – which took place around 2pm local time on Thursday – left emergency services scrambling amid thick plumes of smoke and debris, entire streets in shock and families shattered. All but one of the 242 people on board the flight were killed, but there were dozens more fatalities on the ground as the plane came down in a residential area. Grief engulfs neighbourhood where Air India Flight 171 killed dozens on the ground As investigators sift through the wreckage of the Air India Dreamliner that plunged into a medical college complex in Ahmedabad, families mourn loved ones lost in an inferno, reports Namita Singh Tom Watling15 June 2025 22:00 Families grieve as officials start handing remains of victims killed in Air India crash More than 72 hours after India's deadliest aviation tragedy in recent memory, Rohit Patel – a father mourning the loss of his two children – stood trembling before a room of Indian health and investigative officials in Ahmedabad and demanded answers. 'When will the bodies be given?' he asked, breaking down in front of television cameras and senior officers. His son Harshit and daughter-in-law Pooja Patel were among the 242 passengers and crew aboard the Air India Express flight that crashed minutes after take-off on Thursday. Dr Rajnish Patel, additional medical superintendent of the city's Civil Hospital, attempted to pacify the grief-stricken father. 'You will receive a call,' he said. 'Please come to the hospital only after that.' Families grieve as they receive remains of victims killed in Air India crash As anguished families wait for the return of their loved ones' remains, tensions are mounting over the slow pace of DNA identification following the deadly Air India crash. More than three days on, only a fraction of the victims have been identified, and grief is giving way to anger, reports Namita Singh from Ahmedabad Tom Watling15 June 2025 21:00 India urgently inspecting all Boeing 787s after deadly Air India crash kills at least 270 people India is urgently inspecting all Boeing 787s after a devastating Air India crash that claimed at least 270 lives this week, the aviation minister said on Saturday, adding that the authorities were investigating all possible causes. The aviation regulator on Friday ordered Air India to conduct additional maintenance checks on its Boeing 787-8/9 aircraft equipped with GEnx engines, including assessments of certain take-off parameters, electronic engine control tests and engine fuel-related checks. Tom Watling15 June 2025 20:00

New video of doomed Air India flight 'shows Boeing 787 did lose power' just before crash killed 242 passengers and ploughed into residential area
New video of doomed Air India flight 'shows Boeing 787 did lose power' just before crash killed 242 passengers and ploughed into residential area

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

New video of doomed Air India flight 'shows Boeing 787 did lose power' just before crash killed 242 passengers and ploughed into residential area

A new bombshell video provides evidence that the Air India Boeing 787 lost power after take off, leading to a catastrophic crash that killed 242 passengers, an aviation expert has claimed. Commercial airline pilot Steve Schreiber, who analyses plane crashes and close calls, said a new clearer video shows the doomed flight suffered a 'dual engine failure' before crashing in what was one of India's worst aviation disasters. The London-bound 787 Dreamliner began losing height moments after take-off and exploded into a fireball over a residential area in the Ahmedabad, Gujarat. All but one of the 242 passengers were killed in the horror crash along with another 38 who were killed on the ground when the plane smashed into residential buildings. Initially Mr Schreiber, known by his pseudonym Captain Steve online, 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. However, a clearer video has emerged of the crash, with higher quality visuals and sound, which Mr Schreiber believes could prove that a dual engine failure led to the plane's terrifying final moments. He said a tiny detail which can be seen on the new video is a 'total gamechanger'. Mr Schreiber explained on his Youtube channel Captain Steeeve that beneath the right wing of the aeroplane, he could see a 'protrusion on the belly of the aircraft'. Underneath that there is a 'little grey dot', he added. He said this is evidence of the Ram Access Turbine (RAT) deploying on the plane. A protrusion on the belly of the aircraft, seen in a newly emerged video, has provided evidence about the plane's final moments 'Many aeroplanes have it,' he said. 'It is just behind the wing on the right side of the aeroplane, there is a little door that holds it in. 'It looks like a little Evinrude motor, it's a little two bladed prop. 'The purpose is to provide electrical and hydraulic pressure for the aircraft on an extreme emergency.' Mr Schreiber said that on a 787 there are three things that will deploy the RAT automatically. He said: 'A massive electrical failure, a massive hydraulic failure, or a dual engine failure. 'Any one of those three things will cause that RAT to deploy.' The aviation expert said that the protrusion and the grey dot were visual evidence of the RAT deploying on the aircraft. He added: 'That little grey dot is the RAT. The protrusion is the door that opened to allow the rat to come down.' Mr Schreiber then detailed the second piece of evidence - the sound of the video. He said: 'A RAT makes a distinctive sound, it sounds like a propeller aeroplane going by, or a real high-pitched squeal. It is basically spinning at the speed of sound to produce the energy, electrical and hydraulic that it needs to. 'If you weren't looking at it, it sounded like a single-engine prop aeroplane just flew by. 'The RAT was originally designed as the absolute last resort, assuming there is going to be a dual engine failure at altitude. 'It is not designed for an aeroplane at 400- 500ft. But it is evidence for us.' His theory is that the crash was caused by a dual-engine failure. He added: 'It is evidence for us it was dual engine failure, most likely. It could have been electrical issue, it could have been hydraulic issue, it could have been either one of that. 'But I think the fact the aeroplane is mushing out the sky gives the idea it was a dual engine failure.' Alongside visual and audio evidence provided by the new video, Mr Schreiber believes the eyewitness report taken from sole survivor Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, 40, provides the third clue to the plane's demise. The British national, 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. Describing what happened after take off in an interview from his hospital bed he said: 'When the flight took off, within five to 10 seconds it felt like it was stuck in the air. 'Suddenly, the lights started flickering - green and white. 'The aircraft wasn't gaining altitude and was just gliding before it suddenly slammed into a building and exploded.' It came after a passenger on the plane when it flew the day before the crash claimed that electronics on the jet such as the screens in the seats were not working. Mr Schreiber believes his short interview may hold another piece of evidence to explain the plane's demise. Wreckage of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner lies at the site where the Air India plane crashed in Ahmedabad, India, June 12, 2025 He explained: 'He said just prior to the crash, he heard a loud bang and the lights flickered on the inside of the aeroplane. 'We have got a guy saying he heard a loud bang and the lights flickered, what would cause that? The deployment of the RAT. 'It's going to take over electrical and hydraulic and as it does that the lights in the aeroplane would flicker. 'I have heard reports the captain got out a mayday call and he said they were losing thrust. 'That could be the fourth piece of evidence for dual engine failure.' The evidence that the crash could have been caused by dual-engine failure was ruled out by Aviation Herald - who reported on the crash from India. But Mr Schreiber said he thinks the publication 'probably got that wrong' based on the evidence he has seen. Although the evidence gives 'a lot more clarity' on the crash, he believes it also sends the investigation 'back to square one' because he has no idea why both engines on a 787 would flame out right after take off. The new video emerged as it was revealed to be the original footage of a clip that was shared around the world, which had in fact been a recording of a video on a person's phone. Mr Schreiber explained: 'The video that we all saw was a video of a video and the quality was extremely poor. The original is much sharper. What happened was some cameraman was standing in front of the screen watching the video play. You can see him at the end of it. The audio is not very good and the visual is not very good.' The clarity of the original video along with the original audio helped him come to his new conclusion on the cause of the crash. It comes as the pilot of the India Air plane has been hailed a hero by locals after it emerged that he diverted the jet a the last second to avoid an apartment block, saving the lives of 18 families. The families are convinced they owe their lives to Captain Semeet Sabharwal - who diverted the plane which was heading towards them when it began to rapidly descent after take off, The Sun reported. Captain Sabharwal managed to divert the plane towards a patch of grassland instead. Locals in Ahmedabad fled their homes when the plane erupted into a fireball next to a medical college. The top two floors of a disused four-storey military building were destroyed by the crash. A fire then tore through the college's hostel and killed dozens of students and staff who were eating in the canteen. Captain Sabharwal, 55, was an experienced pilot with more than 8,200 hours of flying time and the son of an officer with India's civil aviation authority. He was the main carer for his father, now in his 80s and called him before taking off. 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.

‘Hero' India Air pilot ‘saved dozens of lives' with last gasp decision moments before doomed jet's horror crash
‘Hero' India Air pilot ‘saved dozens of lives' with last gasp decision moments before doomed jet's horror crash

The Sun

time9 hours ago

  • The Sun

‘Hero' India Air pilot ‘saved dozens of lives' with last gasp decision moments before doomed jet's horror crash

THE India Air pilot was hailed a hero yesterday by locals when he diverted the doomed jet at the last second to avoid their apartment block. All 18 families in the three-storey building under the flight path are convinced they owe their lives to Captain Sumeet Sabharwal — whose Boeing 787 Dreamliner was heading for them when its suffered a loss of engine thrust after take-off. 4 4 4 But with feet to spare, he managed to divert the plane carrying 242 passengers and crew towards a patch of grassland. The locals raced from their homes in Ahmedabad when a fireball from 90 tons of aviation fuel ignited as the plane slammed into the ground next to a medical college. The plane obliterated the top two floors of a disused four-storey military building. And the fire tore through the college's hostel, killing dozens of students and staff who were having lunch in the canteen. All but one of the 242 people on the plane died. Captain Sabharwal, 55, the son of an officer with India's civil aviation authority, was an experienced aviator with 8,200 hours of flying time. He was the main carer for his father, now in his 80s, who he called before take-off. Colleagues paid tribute to Captain Sabharwal from Mumbai, saying: 'He was a good, quiet person.' Mum Geeta Patni, 48, who is one of the closest residents to the crash site, told The Sun: 'The building was shaking. We were so scared. 'There was chaos in the street and fire and smoke. What caused the Air India plane disaster? Six main theories emerge – from mystery over landing gear to 40C weather 'Any closer and we would have died. The pilot saved us. 'We have always worried this might happen because the planes go over so low.' Another resident, Jahanvi Rajput, 28, said: 'Thanks to the pilot Captain Sabharwal we survived. He's a hero. It is because of him we are alive. 'The green space next to us was visible to him and that's where he went.' Mum-of-two Chancal Bai, 50, said: 'If the plane had crashed into this residential area, there would have been hundreds more victims.' All of the bodies from the site have been recovered with just 32 indentified so far. Most of the plane has now been removed and the engine will be analysed in America. British and American experts have joined India's National Disaster Response Force to scour the area. 4 Hundreds of desperate relatives have been gathering for news of loved ones at the local Civil Hospital. The first funeral service for a British victim was held yesterday, for Elcina Alpesh Makwana, 42, of Hounslow, West London. Her uncle Joseph Patelia said: 'Before take-off, she called her father to say she'd boarded safely and would call once she landed in London. That call never came. 'She vanished, leaving us in shock, in tears, unable to believe what we're hearing.'

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