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New Air India crash video shows students jumping off balcony as smoke billows

New Air India crash video shows students jumping off balcony as smoke billows

India Today6 hours ago

A video has surfaced showing how people in nearby hostels tried to save their lives by climbing down from balconies after the London-bound Air India flight, with 242 on board, crashed into the BJ Medical College Hostel near Ahmedabad airport. In the videos, accessed by India Today TV, MBBS students can be seen trying desperately to climb down from the second and third floors by tying clothes together. advertisementThe fire can be seen billowing in front of the hostel in the visuals, with people shouting in panic. A few students can also be seen tying ropes made of bedsheets, while others climb down using the railing in a desperate bid to escape.
Although all on board, barring one lone survivor, died in the crash, nearly 30 people on the ground were charred to death from the impact.On June 12, as the Boeing 787 Dreamliner plunged at a vertical speed of 475 feet per minute from an altitude of 625 feet, its tail crashed into the college hostel's mess, where several students were having lunch at around 1:43 pm, roughly five minutes after the flight took off from the Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport.advertisement

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I wasn't on Air India Flight 171, but I haven't stopped reliving the horror
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  • India Today

I wasn't on Air India Flight 171, but I haven't stopped reliving the horror

Based on true eventsIt was 12 am when I got a call from my father, a very unlikely time for someone who is usually in bed by 11 pm.'Hello, your mother and sister's phones are still switched off. Have they landed?' a restless voice asked from the other end. 'It's raining in Mumbai, probably that's the reason for the delay,' I tried to pacify him, though I was equally worried about their well-being. 'Don't worry, they'll probably land any moment.'advertisementI was just about to check the flight status when my sister messaged: 'LANDED.'I let out a sigh of relief, called dad, told him they had landed, and went to incident I'm talking about is from June 16, just four days after Air India Flight 171 crashed in the Meghaninagar neighbourhood of Ahmedabad, killing 241 out of 242 passengers on hasn't been the sameIt's been just about six months, but the year has brought more bad news than feels like we've been moving from one bad dream to another, without even getting time to recoup from the trauma each incident leaves behind — be it the terrorist attack on unarmed tourists in Baisaran Valley, Kashmir, that killed 26 civilians, or the Air India crash that sent shivers down our weren't there when these incidents happened, and I'm sure many of us thanked our stars for that, but we've relived every moment of those horrific events, every single day, through social media and news coverage. And it's far from a good Air India crash has reignited my lingering fears as a flier.I know a neighbour who changed her Air India tickets to Dubai and made sure she booked a different airline. If that meant no refund, so be it.I've always been an anxious flier (the anxiety comes from the fear of a crash itself), and this felt like my worst nightmare come true. Once you're onboard, your life depends entirely on the pilot, and of course, on the aircraft, which we mostly assume is in perfect all, who would allow a faulty aircraft to fly, right? It's human life we're talking the allegations seem to suggest haunting storiesI wasn't on that fateful flight, but every story I read about the passengers onboard makes me feel closer to their will happen now that they're gone? For some, it was a journey that promised the joy of a new beginning; for others, just a reunion with loved ones. All of it, silenced in one even worse is thinking about their last must have happened? How did they react? Was it painful?These questions may sound insensitive, but they come from one quiet, persistent fear: if I were ever in that situation, what exactly would happen?After all, these were just regular passengers, just like you and me, who boarded a flight one fine afternoon, only to see everything come to an end in a few media makes it worseSocial media hasn't been helpful either. While several influencers are busy suggesting which flights to avoid (Airbus or Boeing), conspiracy theorists are sharing their own dissected versions of the there are astrologers, warning people not to fly on certain dates because of Mercury Retrograde. I don't usually believe in astrology, but this time, I gave in. And right now, I'm genuinely rethinking whether I should travel at all this the crash, there's been a steady stream of updates about flights being diverted, sometimes due to technical snags, sometimes bomb threats, and somehow, Air India seems to be at the centre of every bad news.A fear shared by manyadvertisementJust when I thought I was alone in feeling this way, the persistent dread, the intrusive what-ifs, I realised this isn't just a personal battle with fear. I'm not the only one avoiding booking tickets or googling 'safest airlines 2025' at 2 out, and you'll see it's not just a few nervous fliers grappling with post-crash jitters. The collective mental health toll of such tragedies runs deeper and wider than we like to admit.'When a crash of this scale happens, something so unprecedented in recent aviation history, it jolts people's sense of safety,' explains Dr Vishnu Gade, Consultant Psychiatrist at Arete Hospital. 'Even if you're not directly involved, the mind doesn't always make that distinction. You're still processing trauma, just second-hand (vicarious trauma).'According to Dr Gade, this isn't just a vague unease. What many of us are feeling can show up as a very real phobia, fear of flying (aviophobia), heightened anxiety, even panic attacks, especially when these events are followed obsessively through the news or social remedy, Dr Gade stresses, is the importance of support systems - family, friends, and yes, therapy if needed - especially if the anxiety lingers beyond a few weeks, starts affecting sleep, or disrupts daily something else that he said seemed true yet heartbreaking:'In another month, people will move on. That's the world we live in. But for some, especially those who were affected, even indirectly, the fear doesn't leave. It lingers quietly, in our choices, our habits, our hesitation to book that next ticket.'(Views expressed in this piece are those of the author)Tune InMust Watch

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New Videos Show Students Jumping Off Hostel Balcony As Air India Plane Crashes Into Building A new video has surfaced showing students leaping from a building at a medical college in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, where an Air India plane crashed on June 12. In the latest video, students are seen climbing over balcony railings and attempting to descend as flames engulf the lower floors of the BJ Medical College hostel, believed to have been caused by the impact of the crashing aircraft. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, carrying 242 people, crashed into the BJ Medical College complex shortly after taking off from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport at 1:39pm. Of the 242 people on board the London-bound flight, 241 lost their lives. Miraculously, one passenger survived. The crash also claimed the lives of 29 people on the ground, including five MBBS students.#ahmedabadplanecrash #airindiacrash #bjmedicalcollege #studentvideo #buildingfire #hostelfire #boeing787 #svpi #fatalcrash #planesurvivor #groundfatalities #mbbsstudents #planeimpact #flames #balconyjump #desperateescape #aviationtragedy #airindia171 #june12crash #ahmedabad #medicalcollege #toi #toibharat 10.4K views | 1 hour ago

Ahmedabad plane crash: Mortal remains of Capt Sabharwal reaches Mumbai
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Mumbai, June 17 (UNI) The mortal remains of Sumeet Sabharwal, captain of Air India flight 171 en route to London's Gatwick Airport, which crashed in Ahmedabad shortly after takeoff on June 12 and killed 241 on board, were brought to his residence in Mumbai's Powai on Tuesday morning. A large number of people gathered near Sabharwal's residence to pay their final respects and condolences to the grieving family. A pall of grief descended over Jal Vayu Vihar in Powai, a residential complex primarily inhabited by retired Air Force officers and aviation personnel. UNI AAA ARN PRS

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