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Powys County Times
35 minutes ago
- Powys County Times
Air India crash investigations continue as British victims are named
Investigations are continuing into the crash of a London-bound plane that killed 240 people, with the death toll likely to increase. Air India confirmed there was only one survivor – a UK national – out of the 242 people on board the Boeing 787 Dreamliner when it crashed into a medical college shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad Airport. It is one of the deadliest plane crashes in terms of the number of British nationals killed and the first involving a 787. There are fears the number of people killed on the ground could rise. Images taken after the incident showed debris from the plane embedded in the BJ Medical College building. At least five medical students were killed and about 50 injured. Briton Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, 40, is believed to be the only survivor of the crash. He was in seat 11A, next to one of the aircraft's emergency exits. Speaking outside the family home in Leicester, his brother, Nayan Kumar Ramesh, 27, said: 'We were just shocked as soon as we heard it. 'I last spoke to him yesterday morning. We're devastated, just devastated. 'He said, 'I have no idea how I exited the plane'.' British couple Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek, who run a spiritual wellness centre, were said to be among the dead. Mr Greenlaw-Meek appeared on ITV's This Morning earlier this year, and former editor of the show Martin Frizell praised his 'vibrancy' and 'enthusiasm'. 'So so sad to hear that Fiongal Greenlaw-Meek and his partner are reported to be among the passengers and crew killed today on board the Air India flight bound for Gatwick,' he said in an Instagram post. 'I remember his visit to the studio in January, he was passionate about auras and although I'm a sceptical sort his vibrancy and sheer enthusiasm won folk over.' The Gloucester Muslim Community group offered 'sincere and deepest condolences' after Akeel Nanabawa, his wife Hannaa and their daughter Sara were reported to be among the victims. 'During this moment of overwhelming sorrow, our hearts go out to all those left behind,' a statement said. 'No words can truly ease the pain of such a profound loss, but we pray that the family may find solace in the tremendous outpouring of compassion and solidarity from communities across the world.' Aviation experts have speculated about a number of possible causes for the crash, from both engines failing – possibly due to a bird strike, as happened in the so-called Miracle on the Hudson in 2009 – to the flaps on the aircraft's wings not being set to the correct position for take-off. Tata Group, the parent company of Air India, said it would provide 10 million rupees (around £86,000) to the families of each of those killed in the crash. The company said it would also cover the medical costs of the injured and provide support in the 'building up' of the medical college. UK officials are being deployed to India to support the investigation, the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) said. US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy confirmed US teams from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) were also headed to India with support from Boeing and GE Aerospace. He told reporters it was 'way too premature' to ground Boeing 737s in the aftermath of the crash. 'They have to get on the ground and take a look,' he said. 'People are looking at videos and trying to assess what happened, which is never a strong, smart way to make decisions on what took place.' The King said he was 'desperately shocked' and Buckingham Palace said he was being kept updated. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the UK was in constant contact with Indian authorities. The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said any British nationals requiring consular assistance, or who have concerns about family or friends, should call 020 7008 5000.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Hundreds killed in Air India disaster as Gatwick flight crashes after take-off – but one Briton is ‘sole survivor'
Hundreds of people are dead after an Air India flight destined for London crashed moments after it took off and crashed into a building on Thursday, in the world's worst aviation disaster in a decade. However, one passenger, a British man visiting family, appears to have miraculously survived. The airline said 241 people were killed when the Boeing Dreamliner bound for Gatwick came down in a residential area in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad. There had been 242 people on board, including 11 children and 12 crew members. Among the passengers were 169 Indians, 53 British people, seven Portuguese citizens and one Canadian. Downing Street warned that the British public should be prepared for a significant loss of British lives, and MP Bob Blackman said some of his constituents in London had been notified of the deaths of their relatives. A British family of three who were killed were Akeel Nanabawa, his wife Hannaa Vorajee, from Gloucester, and their four-year-old daughter, Sara. Abdullah Samad, headteacher of Sara's primary school, said she was a 'ray of sunshine' and that her parents were known for their charity work. A British couple who ran a spiritual wellness company were also among the victims. Jamie Ray Greenlaw-Meek and his husband Fiongal Greenlaw-Meek, from London, were returning home after a 10-day retreat, their family said. Plumes of smoke billowed from the crash site after the plane erupted into a huge fireball when it struck a medical college not far from the airport. Some medical students in the building jumped to escape just before the plane hit. Emergency services rushed to douse the charred wreckage, as well as several surrounding multi-storey buildings. As the emergency effort continued into Thursday evening more than 200 bodies had been removed from the crash site. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner aircraft took off from Ahmedabad airport at 1.38pm local time (9.08am BST), but crashed just moments later. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said the flight made a mayday call to air-traffic control, but there was no response to subsequent calls made by controllers to the aircraft. Vidhi Chaudhary, a top state police officer, initially said 294 people were dead, including students in the building that was hit, but later revised the death toll down to more than 240, after it was realised that body parts had led to some double-counting. 'We are still verifying the number of dead, including those killed in the building where the plane crashed,' she said. Ramila, the mother of one, said her son had gone to the hostel for his lunch break when the plane crashed. 'My son is safe, and I have spoken to him. He jumped from the second floor, so he suffered some injuries,' she said. The dead included Vijay Rupani, the former chief minister of Gujarat state, of which Ahmedabad is the main city. Relatives have been asked to give DNA samples to identify the dead, state health secretary Dhananjay Dwivedi said. The cause of the tragedy has yet to be established but investigations are under way. US aerospace safety consultant Anthony Brickhouse said videos showed that the landing gear was down at a phase of flight when it would typically be up. A formal investigation has been initiated by the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau, Indian civil aviation minister Ram Mohan Naidu said. 'The government is constituting a high-level committee comprising experts from multiple disciplines to examine the matter in detail,' he said. The sole survivor was 40-year-old Briton Viswashkumar Ramesh, who told local media how the disaster unfolded. 'Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed,' Mr Ramesh told the Hindustan Times, which showed a boarding pass for seat 11A in his name. 'It all happened so quickly,' he told the paper from his hospital bed. '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.' Three of the Britons who died in the crash were identified by the Gloucester Muslim Community as Akeel Nanabawa, his wife Hannaa and their four-year-old daughter Sara. The flight was under the command of Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, a Line Training Captain with 8,200 hours of flying experience, and First Officer Clive Kundar, who had logged 1,100 hours. There were 10 other crew members on board the flight. A team of US experts will travel to India to help with the investigation, America's National Transportation Safety Board said. Indian prime minister Narendra Modi said the crash had 'stunned and saddened' the country. 'It is heartbreaking beyond words. In this sad hour, my thoughts are with everyone affected by it,' he wrote. UK political leaders have also expressed their heartbreak after the Air India flight bound for London crashed shortly after takeoff. Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer said 'the scenes emerging of a London-bound plane carrying many British nationals crashing in the Indian city of Ahmedabad are devastating', adding he was being kept updated as the situation develops. Foreign secretary David Lammy said he was deeply saddened by the news, and the UK was working with authorities in India 'to urgently establish the facts and provide support'. Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch said it was 'heartbreaking' news. The King said he and Queen Camilla had been 'desparately shocked'. 'Our special prayers and deepest possible sympathy are with the families and friends of all those affected by this appallingly tragic incident across so many nations, as they await news of their loved ones,' King Charles wrote. Condolences poured in from other leaders around the world. 'We share your shock and grief on this tragic day. We all pray for as many lives to be saved as possible and wish a speedy recovery to those injured,' Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said. US president Donald Trump called the crash 'terrible' and the US government said the Federal Aviation Administration was working with Boeing and aircraft engine-maker GE Aerospace in the investigation. India's civil aviation minister Ram Mohan Naidu inspected the crash site on Thursday evening, and said it was a 'deeply distressing' scene. 'We're doing everything we can to support the victims and their families in this tragic hour,' he wrote. Ahmedabad Airport, which suspended all flight operations after the crash, said it was operational again but with limited flights. The last fatal plane crash in India, the world's third-largest aviation market, was in 2020 and involved Air India Express, the airline's low-cost arm. Boeing said it was in contact with Air India and working to gather more information about what had happened. Boeing shares fell 5% as the crash posed a major setback for the planemaker as its new CEO looks to rebuild trust following a series of safety and production challenges. Families in India with concerns should call Air India on 1800 5691 444. For those outside India, call the British Foreign Office on 020 7008 5000


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Why so many Lotto millionaires die tragic and lonely deaths - from the £9m-winner who drank himself to death in 5 years to the man who ended his days in a Blackpool B&B and was buried in an unmarked grave
'It could be you' was the alluring advertising hook when the National Lottery was launched in the UK back in 1994 - teasing seemingly untold fortunes and happiness to follow for the cost of just £1 a ticket. Lady Luck might have pointed her finger weekly at winners - yet the decades since have been littered with losses, pain and tragedies starkly suggesting the drawbacks that can come with hitting the jackpot. Information has newly emerged about the lonely death of a young AU$22million (£10.5million) Powerball winner in Australia, 22-year-old Joshua Winslet. And while there will be hordes of people continuing to play each week - including when the latest £208million Euromillions draw rolls over to this Friday night - there have been plenty of cautionary tales among British winners and their experiences. Experts have been warning of the potential pitfalls, with men seeming especially at risk when succumbing after such sudden apparent good fortune. Psychologist Dr Joanna Silver told MailOnline: 'While winning the lottery sounds like the ultimate dream, sudden wealth can be emotionally destabilising - it can remove familiar structures and routines and can leave people unsure of who they are or what to do next. 'The loss of purpose, sudden pressure to "be happy", real or perceived changes in how others treat them can leave people feeling disoriented, confused and isolated.' She described how people already experiencing mental health issues such as anxiety or depression could have even such a 'positive' major life event make such feelings 'more intense'. Dr Silver said: 'Lottery wins can really increase pre existing feelings. If someone already feels unworthy, for example, sudden wealth might not bring happiness - it might deepen their sense of loneliness, guilt, or emotional disconnection.' And there can be knock-on difficulties when dealing with others, even close and loved ones, with Dr Silver adding: 'Relationships are often built around shared experience and a sudden lottery win can change those dynamics quickly. 'Winners may struggle with trust, wondering whether people like them for who they are or because of their money. 'Loved ones might also articulate expectations that the winner should now support or "fix" everything. 'Such imagined or real expectations can can lead to tension, resentment, or guilt on both sides.' She also warned how men might tend towards more such struggles, adding: 'Some men are socialised to deal with emotional issues privately, or not at all. 'They may be less likely to seek support or talk openly when they're struggling, especially if they feel they "should" be happy. 'The pressure to be in control, to provide, or to appear successful may also make it harder for some men to process the emotional side of sudden change. 'This does not mean men are intrinsically less resilient but that societal expectations can sometimes limit the ways that they cope.' New details emerging this week revealed how struggling plumber Mr Winslet, 22, dipped into the last $19 (£11) in his bank account to buy a ticket for a AU$100million (£48million) draw in 2022. He became the sole claimant of a division prize worth AU$22million. But the young man who had endured bullying at school while suffering from two incurable conditions from birth - Duane syndrome and Goldenhar syndrome - plunged into a life of hedonism, lavishing his new-found cash on drugs such as MDMA, cocaine and marijuana. In 2020, police raided his home in New Port, Adelaide, and found 27.3g of MDMA, some stored in a bowl in his fridge near a box of Red Bull, as well 2.27g of cocaine plus a Mauser handgun and ammunition in his bathroom. He pleaded guilty to supplying MDMA and possessing a firearm without a licence, and in August 2022 was sentenced to three years and nine months in jail - suspended for two years on a good behaviour bond. Mr Winslet was then found dead at home in December that year, with an autopsy later confirming the cause as health complications from excessive drug use - but it was only this week that details of his death were outlined. British lottery winners have also struggled in the aftermath of their jackpot wins. Keith Gough, £9million - National Lottery Father-of-two Keith Gough landed £9million on the Lottery - only to become so 'bored' after giving up his job as a baker that he drank himself to death, it was said. Mr Gough, 58, of Bridgnorth in Shropshire, was thought to be penniless when he died in March 2010 after suffering a heart attack brought on by drinking and stress - though it later emerged he had actually left almost £800,000 in his will. Mr Gough and his wife Louise won £9million in 2005 and splashed out on a top-of-the-range BMW, racehorses and an executive box at Aston Villa. But the couple, wed for 27 years, separated two years later after Mr Gough quit his job and began drinking heavily out of 'boredom'. He moved to Cheshire where he rented a £1million home and hired a chauffeur and a gardener on annual salaries of £25,000 and £15,000 respectively. But he blew a fortune on gambling and was duped out of more than £700,000 by a conman persuading him to invest in bogus business schemes. The pair met when Mr Gough was being treated for alcohol dependency in the Priory rehabilitation clinic in Birmingham. Mr Gough told in a 2009 interview how his life had been 'ruined' by winning the lottery, saying: 'Without routine in my life I started to spend, spend, spend - In the end I was just bored. 'Before the win all I would drink was some wine with a meal. I used to be popular but I've driven away all my friends. I don't trust anyone any more. 'When I see someone going in to a newsagent, I advise them not to buy a lottery ticket.' Paul Maddison, £11million - National Lottery Double glazing salesman Paul Maddison, from Hastings in East Sussex, scooped half of a £22.6million National Lottery win in 1995 with business partner Mark Gardiner. Yet it was later revealed how the four-times married man ended his days as a 'miser' living alone in a modest £100,000 flat, dying aged of 73 in November 2023 - just months after his 62-year-old wife Evelyn passed away. At the time his lotto windfall was one of the biggest ever in this country - and he initially marked his stroke of luck with a lavish romantic wedding on Valentine's Day on a beach in Mauritius. Mr Maddison later bought a 'fairytale' 16th century castle set in 37 acres of grounds - Robgill Tower, near Scottish town Dumfries - to share with his fourth wife Evelyn. But he chose to rent it out at a vast rate before selling it at a huge profit while living out his final years in his more humdrum apartment in Perth, central Scotland - 500 miles from his original hometown of Hastings. A friend who knew him for years told MailOnline in 2023: 'Paul was the tightest person I've ever known. He never bought a round in all the years I've known him. It wouldn't surprise me if he still had the whole Camelot payout in a box under his bed.' It was suggested that Mr Maddison's only financial extravagances in his final years were generous donations to the Jehovah's Witness movement he had lately joined. Mr Gardiner, who decided not to retire after sharing the £22.6million lottery win and kept running a double glazing firm, said after his former friend's death: 'It's a shame we lost touch. I tried to stay in touch with him and I would leave messages for him on his phone but he had moved on.' Mr Gardiner himself has told of splashing out on buying his own football club as well as a Barbados home - only to run out of money amid a series of failed investments and return to working out of a van as a glazier. And he has spoken of still buying tickets with the same numbers he used in 1995, saying: 'Don't get me wrong, if I won the lottery now at 61 - I'd have done so many different things.' Margaret Loughrey, £27million - EuroMillions A Euromllions prize winner who described her £27million jackpot as 'destroying' her life was found dead by police at her £125,000 home eight years after the windfall. Margaret Loughrey, 56, scooped the EuroMillions top prize in 2013 after buying a ticket when walking back from the Job Centre, living on benefits of just £58 a week. Her good fortune saw Ms Loughrey, from Northern irish capital Belfast, dubbed 'Maggie Millions' and allowed her to buy a property empire including a £125,000 bungalow, a pub and a former mill turned leisure centre. She also pledged to give at least half of the money away to good causes, but she was sectioned four months after the draw and later described life as a multi-millionaire by declaring: 'If there is a hell, I have been in it. It has been that bad.' She bought Herdman's Mill in Sion Mills, Northern Ireland, in 2014, but it was targeted by fires and vandalism - and Ms Loughrey was also ordered to do 150 hours of community service in 2015 after being convicted of assaulting a taxi driver. Ms Loughrey accused people of having 'stolen millions' from her, adding: 'I regret winning the lottery, of course I do. I was a happy person before - I am a human being and all it has done is destroy my life.' At the last count she said she had £5million left, saying: 'You can't take your money with you. There is no shroud with pockets.' Police said her sudden death was not treated as suspicious. She was not thought to have ever married but was survived by her four brothers and sister. One of her brothers, Paul Loughrey, later told the Mail: 'The lottery win done none of us any good, let me tell you. The day that she won it, I said, "Life is never going to be the same, this is going to destroy some of us here". 'It was too much for Margaret to deal with. It was a lot of money. I couldn't have dealt with it - personally I wouldn't have wanted it. We all tried to help Margaret over the years, but she just didn't want to know, that's the bottom line.' Among her post-lottery prize purchases was Herdman's Mill (pictured) in Sion Mills in 2014, though it was later hit by fires and vandalism Helen Ford, £500,000 - scratchcard Former ballet dancer Helen Ford, 54, died in a collision with a train after years of struggling to cope with a £500,000 scratchcard bonus, an inquest heard. The win meant she could buy an apartment in seaside town Penarth, near Cardiff - but friends later branded the windfall 'the worst thing that could ever happen to her'. An inquest into her death at Cardiff Coroner's Court was told she had struggled to manage her finances after the lottery win in September 2003 and was living with bipolar personality disorder. Miss Ford had won the jackpot as part of a hat-trick of wins in one day, garnering £45 on her first scratchcard then the big prize and a further £50 on the National Lottery. Weeks later she told of being diagnosed with manic depression at the age of 25. She said: 'People seem to think I should be happy all the time because of the lottery. But money doesn't buy you health and happiness. 'The lottery helps as it's given me financial security and the opportunity to explore other avenues, like holidays that I wouldn't normally afford. 'But it doesn't buy health or solve problems. People who think if they win £30million it will solve their problems - it won't. 'If I had won £30million, it wouldn't have made me better. Money isn't what's important in life and people should remember that.' Speaking after Ms Ford's death, her friend Tracey Alexander said: 'When she won the lottery it was the worst thing that could have ever happened to her. She was unable to cope with being responsible for the money. It didn't do much good for her.' Friends described Ms Ford's (pictured) windfall 'the worst thing that could ever happen to her' Mukhtar Mohidin, £17.9million - National Lottery There was a media frenzy when the National Lottery's first rollover jackpot was finally claimed in December 1994 - having hit a top value of £17.9million. Winning ticket holder Mukhtar Mohidin initially ticked the 'no publicity' box with lotto organisers Camelot - but a judge's injunction ruled his identity could be revealed. At the time he was a 42-year-old chemical factory shift worker living with his wife and three young children in a redbrick terraced house in Blackburn. But his life went into a downward spiral after that abrupt change in fortunes, including being shunned by his local Muslim community as he pursued a gambling addiction. Mr Mohidin donated £320,000 to develop a new meeting hall, but mosque elders returned the money and it stood unfinished for years before being demolished. He and his wife went on to divorce and he spent thousands on escorts and lavish living, before dying aged 64 while living in a £35-a-night B&B in Blackpool. His ex-wife had obtained a court injunction preventing their children from being identified - while it was also revealed he had a 'love child' by an escort he dated. Ex-lover Charlotte Doyle told the Mail in 2017: 'He went from being a casino and party-loving playboy into the man I suspect he had been before he won the money.' Mr Mohidin is now buried in an unmarked grave in a Berkshire cemetery, afte dying on August 23 2017 in a nearby hospital. His official cause of death was given as complications from a urinary tract infection, though his also listed ancillary ailments including kidney failure, liver cirrhosis and heart disease. One family member told the Mail at the time: 'He died from good living.'