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The 11A seat connection: Air India crash's sole survivor and Thai singer both spared from same seat

The 11A seat connection: Air India crash's sole survivor and Thai singer both spared from same seat

The Star15-06-2025
Ruangsak Loychusak (left) and Vishwash Kumar Ramesh (right) both survived separate plane crashes in 1998 and 2025, respectively, while seated in the same seat, 11A. - James Ruangsak/Facebook, AFP via ST/ ANN
BANGKOK: When Thai actor-singer Ruangsak Loychusak saw news of the June 12 Air India plane crash, one detail sent chills down his spine: the sole survivor had been sitting in seat 11A - the very same seat number as Ruangsak's when he survived a deadly crash nearly 27 years ago.
'Survivor of a plane crash in India. He sat in the same seat as me. 11A,' Ruangsak wrote in a Facebook post, describing the eerie coincidence that has now captivated the Internet.
Air India Flight AI171 crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad on June 12. Of the 242 people on board the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, only one - Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, a British national - made it out alive.
Thrown from the aircraft during impact, Vishwash, 40, suffered multiple injuries but managed to walk away from the wreckage and into a waiting ambulance.
Speaking from hospital, Vishwash told Indian media: 'For some time, I thought I was also going to die. But when I opened my eyes, I realised I was alive and I tried to unbuckle myself from the seat and escape from where I could.'
Back in December 1998, Ruangsak was just 20 when Thai Airways Flight TG261 crashed while trying to land in Surat Thani Airport in southern Thailand.
The aircraft plunged into a swamp, killing 101 of the 146 people onboard.
Ruangsak survived - and over the years, has spoken publicly about the trauma and survivor's guilt he carried. He reportedly refused to fly for nearly a decade, calling the life he's lived since a 'second life'.
Now, with both he and Vishwash linked by the same seat number and similar survival stories, interest in seat 11A has exploded online.
But experts warn that there's no such thing as a universally 'safest seat'.
While Viswash's position beside a functioning emergency exit proved critical, that won't always be the case, experts say.
'Each accident is different, and it is impossible to predict survivability based on seat location,' said Mitchell Fox, director at the US-based Flight Safety Foundation, in comments to Reuters.
Aircraft layouts vary widely, and what's considered a good position in one configuration might not be in another.
'In this particular instance, because the passenger was sitting adjacent to the emergency exit, this was obviously the safest seat on the day,' said Ron Bartsch, chairman of Sydney-based AvLaw Aviation Consulting.
'But it's not always 11A, it's just 11A on this configuration of the Boeing 787.'
Aviation safety experts remind passengers that survival often depends less on luck and more on preparedness.
Listening to the safety briefing, identifying your nearest exit, and following crew instructions without delay can significantly improve your chances, they say.
It may be tempting to view 11A as a miracle seat. But in the world of aviation safety, every crash is different - and survival comes down to far more than a number, experts say. - The Straits Times/ANN
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Volunteers help reopen US camp for disabled children after Texas floods
Volunteers help reopen US camp for disabled children after Texas floods

The Star

time14 hours ago

  • The Star

Volunteers help reopen US camp for disabled children after Texas floods

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'Nobody else knew': Allied prisoners of war held in Taiwan
'Nobody else knew': Allied prisoners of war held in Taiwan

The Star

timea day ago

  • The Star

'Nobody else knew': Allied prisoners of war held in Taiwan

JINGUASHI, Taiwan: In a small urban park in Taiwan, more than 4,000 names are etched into a granite wall - most of them British and American servicemen held by the Japanese during World War II. The sombre memorial sits on the site of Kinkaseki, a brutal prisoner of war camp near Taipei and one of more than a dozen run by Japan on the island it ruled from 1895 until its defeat in 1945. For decades, little was known of the PoW camps, said Michael Hurst, a Canadian amateur military historian in Taipei, who has spent years researching them. Many survivors had refused to talk about their experiences, while PoWs held elsewhere in Asia had been unaware of "the horrors" in Taiwan, and museums and academics had glossed over them, Hurst told AFP. After learning of Kinkaseki in 1996, Hurst spearheaded efforts to locate other camps in Taiwan, build memorials for the veterans, and raise public awareness about their bravery and suffering. Starting in 1942, more than 4,300 Allied servicemen captured on battlefields across South-East Asia were sent to Taiwan in Japanese "hell ships". Most of the PoWs were British or American, but Australian, Dutch, Canadian and some New Zealand servicemen were also among them. By the time the war ended, 430 men had died from malnutrition, disease, overwork and torture. The harsh conditions of Taiwan's camps were long overshadowed by Japan's notorious "Death Railway" between Myanmar and Thailand, Hurst said. More than 60,000 Allied PoWs worked as slave labourers on the line, with about 13,000 dying during construction, along with up to 100,000 civilians, mostly forced labour from the region. Their experiences were later captured in the 1950s war movie "The Bridge on the River Kwai". But as stories of Kinkaseki slowly emerged, it became "known as one of the worst PoW camps in all of Asia", Hurst said. Canadian filmmaker Anne Wheeler's physician father was among the more than 1,100 prisoners of war held in Kinkaseki. Wheeler said she and her three older brothers "grew up knowing nothing" about their father's ordeal in the camp, where the men were forced to toil in a copper mine. After her father's death in 1963, Wheeler discovered his diaries recording his experience as a doctor during the war, including Taiwan, and turned them into a documentary. "A War Story" recounts Ben Wheeler's harrowing journey from Japan-occupied Singapore to Taiwan in 1942. By the time her father arrived in Kinkaseki, Wheeler said the men there "were already starving and being overworked and were having a lot of mining injuries". They were also falling ill with "beriberi, malaria, dysentery, and the death count was going up quickly," Wheeler, 78, told AFP in a Zoom interview. Trained in tropical medicine, the doctor had to be "inventive" with the rudimentary resources at hand to treat his fellow PoWs, who affectionately called him "the man sent from God", she said. Inflamed appendices and tonsils, for example, had to be removed without anesthesia using a razor blade because "that was all he had", she said. Taiwan was a key staging ground for Japan's operations during the war. Many Taiwanese fought for Japan, while people on the island endured deadly US aerial bombings and food shortages. Eighty years after Japan's surrender, the former PoWs held in Taiwan are all dead and little physical evidence remains of the camps. At 77, Hurst is still trying to keep their stories alive through the Taiwan POW Camps Memorial Society and private tours. His book "Never Forgotten" is based on interviews with more than 500 veterans, diaries kept by PoWs and correspondence. A gate post and section of wall are all that remain of Kinkaseki, set in a residential neighbourhood of Jinguashi town, surrounded by lush, rolling hills. On the day AFP visited, a Taiwanese woman taking a tour with Hurst said she had "never" studied this part of World War II history at school. "It's very important because it's one of Taiwan's stories," the 40-year-old said. Hurst said he still receives several emails a week from families of PoWs wanting to know what happened to their loved ones in Taiwan. "For all these years, maybe 50 years, they just kept it to themselves," Hurst said. "They knew what they'd suffered, and they knew that nobody else knew." - AFP

Lodge International School donates RM5,000 to Hope Place
Lodge International School donates RM5,000 to Hope Place

Borneo Post

timea day ago

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Lodge International School donates RM5,000 to Hope Place

Gatuman hands over the mock cheque to Wan (second right). KUCHING (Aug 13): Lodge International School has contributed RM5,000 to Hope Place Kuching to aid the purchase of special needs items for the disabled community. The funds were raised by the school's Korean Club and handed over earlier this week by principal Markus Gatuman to Hope Place founder Kelvin Wan during a small handing-over ceremony. The event was witnessed by the club's president Kim Chang Hui, vice-president Marcus Chung, and teacher-in-charge Esther Jung. According to Hope Place, this marks the second time that the Korean Club has donated to the local non-governmental organisation (NGO), as part of its ongoing efforts to promote empathy, love and a culture of giving among the younger generation. Founded in 2013, Hope Place supports nearly 100 disabled individuals across Kuching, Serian and Samarahan, providing essential items such as disposable diapers, specialised milk powder, and wheelchairs. The NGO works closely with Sarawak General Hospital, Sentosa Hospital, and Serian Hospital to ensure proper care for those with physical or mental disabilities. Hope Place expressed its appreciation to Lodge International School and other educational institutions for spreading awareness on community work, diversity, and inclusivity. Those wishing to contribute to Hope Place can contact the NGO on 082-505 987 or 013-567 2775. Donations may be made to its Maybank account (511289001160), or via S Pay Global QR code available on its Facebook page. Receipts will be issued upon request. community financial aid Hope Place lead Lodge International School

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