
IMA urges Tata Sons to support injured medical students after Air India 171 crash
The Indian Medical Association of the Gujarat State Branch on Friday wrote a letter to the Chairman of Tata Sons, requesting to extend support for injured and deceased medical students following the plane crash at the premises of the BJ Medical College in Ahmedabad.
In a letter to N Chandrasekaran, Chairman of Tata Sons, the IMC said, "On behalf of the Indian Medical Association - Gujarat State Branch, we extend our heartfelt appreciation for Air India's announcement of ₹1 crore compensation to the families of the passengers who tragically lost their lives in the recent incident, and for your generous support towards the renovation of the BJMC college hostel."
"We humbly request you also to consider extending financial assistance and necessary support to the medical students present at the crash site who were injured or lost their lives in this unfortunate event," said the letter.
"These individuals were not only victims but also future pillars of our healthcare system, and their well-being and families deserve similar care and support. Accordingly, we earnestly request you to declare immediately similar help to the medical students injured or who have lost their lives. We sincerely hope you will consider this request with compassion and urgency," the letter stated.
Meanwhile, officials from the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) arrived in Ahmedabad, where the London-bound Air India flight crashed on June 12, killing 241 people out of 242 onboard.
The AAIB, a division under the Ministry of Civil Aviation, is responsible for probing aircraft accidents in India.
On Thursday, Union Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu confirmed that a formal investigation has been launched into the crash of Air India flight AI-171.
The Boeing 787-8, Air India flight 171 from Ahmedabad to London, crashed into a resident doctors' hostel building shortly after taking off from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport.
The US-based National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is preparing to send a team of investigators to India to assist in the ongoing probe into the deadly crash.
In parallel, the Indian government has constituted a high-level multidisciplinary committee to examine the causes leading to the crash and recommend preventive measures.
"The Committee will examine the existing Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) and guidelines issued to prevent and handle such occurrences and suggest comprehensive guidelines for dealing with such instances in the future," stated an order issued by the Ministry of Civil Aviation.
"The Committee will not be a substitute for other enquiries being conducted by relevant organisations but will focus on formulating SOPs for preventing and handling such occurrences in the future," the order clarified.
According to the ministry, the committee will have access to all relevant records, including flight data, cockpit voice recordings, aircraft maintenance logs, air traffic control records, and witness testimonies. The panel is expected to submit its report within three months.
The committee is chaired by the Union Home Secretary and includes representatives from the Ministry of Civil Aviation, the Indian Air Force, and aviation experts.
It also noted that it will formulate a comprehensive SOP and suggest the roles of all agencies and organisations of the central and state governments to deal with post-crash incident handling and management.
Hashtags

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


The Print
an hour ago
- The Print
11 DNA matches 48 hrs after Air India crash: Process of releasing victims' bodies to families begins
By Saturday, the hospital had found 11 matches from the 248 blood samples of relatives it has taken so far. The bodies, most charred beyond recognition, were subjected to a DNA test. The Ahmedabad Civil Hospital also collected the DNA samples of all the relatives of the passengers and crew members who were onboard the aircraft. Ahmedabad: Forty-eight hours after an Ahmedabad-London Air India flight crashed within 2 minutes of taking off from the Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport at Ahmedabad, authorities started handing over bodies of victims to the next of kin. 'The mortal remains of one have been handed over and two more will be handed over this evening. This is a meticulous, slow process,' said Dr Rajnish Patel, professor, surgery and additional superintendent at the Ahmedabad Civil Hospital. An Air India flight from Ahmedabad to London crashed at the Meghaninagar neighbourhood of Ahmedabad. The flight was carrying 242 persons, including crew members. All but one passenger, a British national of Indian origin, died in the crash. The Ahmedabad Civil Hospital handed over eight bodies of victims to family members Friday. These were the ones that could be easily identified. Most others were charred and damaged beyond recognition and a DNA test is essential to establish their identity. The hospital started collecting blood samples for DNA testing on its premises starting Thursday evening, converting a large examination hall into a makeshift sample collection centre. Also read: Air India crash: Inside Ahmedabad hospital morgue, bodies await DNA ID as doctors race against heat, time Process of handing over bodies Dr Patel explained that when a configuration of a patient matches with that of a family member, the team notifies the hospital authorities. 'A person from the hospital will call up that relative. A number will be given to that relative so that they can reach the civil hospital and call that number again. From there on, the person will be guided to the medical superintendent's office. From there they will be taken, identified, papers will be verified and the body will then be handed over to them,' Dr. Patel said. He added, 'It usually takes 2-3 days for a simple DNA sampling but there are multiple factors here that have both legal and medical implications, so we have to be careful. It can take up to 72 hours or may be a little longer also.' Dr Alok Pandey, relief commissioner at the Gujarat government, told reporters Saturday evening that the hospital is working with the civic bodies to ensure that a death certificate can be provided to relatives on the spot. 'When the bodies are handed over, these officials will accompany the body in the ambulance along with a police pilot straight to the village,' Dr Pandey said. He added that talathis across the state have been instructed to immediately issue a family card to relatives of victims who lost their lives in the accident so that they don't have any problem in the succession or inheritance process. Pandey said, the Gujarat government has also arranged for a grief counsellor to speak to every family who has lost a loved one. The victims of the plane crash are spread across 18 of the 33 districts of Gujarat. The government has created 230 teams to establish contact with families of all victims of the plane crash. The sole survivor Viswash Kumar Ramesh, a British national of Indian origin, was the sole survivor from the plane crash, seated on 11A of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft. Dr Patel said, Ramesh was extremely lucky and is recovering well. 'The sole survivor is very lucky he was almost unscathed. He is recovering very well. And he is absolutely out of danger. Absolutely stable. He can walk around and go about his normal routine,' Dr Patel said. All those injured in the crash from buildings in the vicinity have been discharged, except for one or two who are in critical care, Dr Patel added. (Edited by Zinnia Ray Chaudhuri) Also read: Civil Aviation Ministry announces dual probe into Air India crash—one technical & another more 'holistic'


The Hindu
2 hours ago
- The Hindu
The silence in the room
There is a particular kind of silence that sits heavy in Indian homes. It is the silence that knows something is wrong but does not have the courage to name it. It is the silence that grows thicker at dinner tables, in curt nods, in the brushing off of tears with a quick nod. In our households, there is no space for sadness that lingers. One may cry when a relative dies, but crying in the middle of a regular day is treated with suspicion. The idea that someone could be sad without a visible reason feels absurd. And so, it begins, the great hiding, the act of tucking away sorrow like a shameful object, behind half-closed doors and fake smiles. Mental health is like the family secret everyone knows but refuses to say aloud. Depression is Lord Voldemort. It is He-Who- Must-Not-Be-Named. The fear is not of the condition itself, but of what it might imply. That something has gone wrong in the family. That we, in all our discipline and duty, have failed to raise someone who is 'strong'. Ask around in any middle-class neighbourhood and you will hear the same script. 'He has everything. Why would he be depressed?' 'She just needs to get married, then things will settle.' 'Don't talk nonsense. In our time, we didn't have the luxury to be depressed.' That last one stings more than the rest. It carries the weight of generations which were told to suppress their pain, swallow their tears, and continue to walk like nothing happened. It is said with a certain pride, as if endurance is the highest form of character. And perhaps it was, once. But the problem with untreated wounds is that they fester. What is passed down is not only land or jewellery, but also silence. The unspoken grief of our mothers, the frustrations of fathers who never learnt to say they were hurting, the quiet suffering of grandmothers who cried in kitchens and then wiped their faces before anyone noticed. Trauma is inherited, even when we don't speak of it. Especially when we don't. I remember a classmate from school. Always cheerful, always laughing. When we heard, years later, that he had taken his life, there was disbelief. Then came the murmurs. 'But he was doing so well.' 'He should've just talked to someone.' Someone. That elusive figure we all believe is out there. But how does one talk when the walls themselves seem to frown upon such conversations? The truth is, we have made it nearly impossible. A boy who cries is mocked. A young man who seeks therapy is laughed at for being too 'modern'. There is still a prevailing belief that anything related to the mind can be willed away. As if sadness is a guest you can shoo out with a broom. As if sleepless nights, the crushing weight in one's chest, the endless thoughts of worthlessness, all of it can be silenced with a walk in the park or a few spoonfuls of ghee. To be fair, it isn't always cruelty. Sometimes, it's ignorance wrapped in affection. Mothers offering turmeric milk, thinking it might cure the emptiness. Fathers suggesting a change of city, hoping it will change the mood. These are attempts at help, even if misplaced. The tragedy is that many people genuinely don't know what depression looks like, not because they haven't seen it, but because they've seen it so often that it has become normal. We all know someone, and sometimes, we are that someone. The way forward is not grand. It begins with smaller things. Listening without interrupting. Letting someone cry without asking them to stop. Not labelling every difficult feeling as weakness. Allowing space for people to say, 'I am not okay,' and not following it up with advice, but with presence. We do not need to pretend to have all the answers. Most of us don't. But we can begin by saying the name. Depression. Anxiety. Loneliness. Words that should not sound foreign in our homes. Words that should not be whispered behind closed doors. There is no shame in feeling. There is only shame in forcing people not to. Until we speak, the silence will keep winning. And in that silence, too many stories will end before they were ever told. annamariya010@


India Gazette
3 hours ago
- India Gazette
DNA of 11 plane crash victims matched, remains of one handed over: BJ Medical College Professor
Ahmedabad (Gujarat) [India], June 14 (ANI): Authorities at BJ Medical College on Saturday provided an update on the identification process following the tragic Air India plane crash, confirming that DNA test results for 11 deceased passengers have been completed and the mortal remains of one victim have been handed over to their family. Officials also provided key updates about the medical care for survivors and the relocation of students affected by the ongoing investigation. Dr Rajnish Patel, Professor of Surgery at BJ Medical College, said, '...DNA samples of 11 deceased have matched till now. The mortal remains of one of the deceased have been handed over to the family... Two more will be handed over by today... It is a slow process and has to be done meticulously. We received one more body today recovered from the tail of the aircraft...' He also explained the challenges involved in the identification process, saying, 'DNA matching usually takes up to 72 hours. But imagine that we have to cross-match more than 240 people. So it will take some time...' On the medical front, Dr Patel informed that almost all injured patients have been discharged. 'Almost all the injured patients have been discharged. Only seven to eight injured remain in the hospital. Out of them, one is critically injured... The sole person who survived the crash is safe and stable... He can stay here for as long as he wants. He will be discharged once he is completely healthy,' he said. Meanwhile, as part of the aircraft crash investigation, the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) has vacated the Atulyam hostel complex, which housed many resident doctors and postgraduate students. Dr Meenakshi Paresh, Dean of BJ Medical College, outlined the steps taken to ensure continuity of accommodation for displaced students. 'Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau has vacated all the hostels of Atulyam for investigation. The accommodation of the postgraduate students living in those hostels has been arranged. There were 33 doctors in Atulyam-1, who have been given accommodation in the postgraduate wing of UN Mehta Hostel...,' she said. 'Out of 100 doctors of GCRI, 52 have been shifted to the old building of GCRI, and for the remaining 48, we have rented 50 rooms for a year... Students of Atulyam-4 are shifted to the dental staff quarters and Mithila quarters. Arrangements for all the students have been made,' she added. Meanwhile, the Junior Doctors' Association of BJ Medical College on Saturday confirmed that four MBBS students lost their lives after the London-bound Air India flight rammed into the doctor's hostel shortly after taking off from the Ahmedabad airport on Thursday. In a statement, the Junior Doctors' Association on Saturday said that the students were having lunch at the mess when the plane crashed into the building, killing four and injuring 20 MBBS students. Of the injured, 11 have been discharged. 'In reference to the recent plane crash incident, JDA- BJMC clarifies that a total of 4 MBBS students from B.J. Medical College, who were having lunch in the mess building, have sadly passed away. Out of the 20 MBBS students injured in the accident, 11 have been discharged with a stable condition,' the statement read. The association also urged people not to be misled by rumours of a higher death toll among students and resident doctors in the plane crash. 'Some individuals are spreading rumours suggesting a high death toll among medical college students and resident doctors. We appeal to everyone not to be misled by such misinformation and to refrain from spreading rumours further.' According to the association, four family members of super-speciality doctors who were residing in the 'Atulyam' building on the college campus also died. 'Among the family members of Super Speciality doctors residing in the 'Atulyam' building, 4 have tragically died. Additionally, the wife of one resident doctor from the Super Speciality department has been injured and is currently under treatment. The condition of all admitted patients is stable and they are recovering quickly,' the statement read. Air India earlier confirmed the death of 241 people out of the 242 on board in the plane crash. (ANI)