
The SECOND miracle of Seat 11A! British father was also due to fly on doomed Air India plane but had to change flights... and was booked on the same lucky seat as crash survivor
A British father who was due to be on board the doomed Air India plane that crashed last week is 'grateful' for his life after deciding to change flights at the last minute.
Owen Jackson, 31, from Saffron Walden in Essex, had been in India for work and was expecting to come home on Thursday.
But tied up at work, his colleagues suggested he take a flight back on Saturday instead.
On Thursday morning, Flight AI171 crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad Airport in Gujarat, leaving just one survivor from 242 on board, including 53 Britons.
Owen had not told his family which day on which day he was set to fly, and was in meetings - not checking his phone - as his wife learned of the tragedy.
In a strange coincidence, he had been booked on to Seat 11A on the Saturday flight - the same lucky seat number that sole survivor Vishwash Kumar Ramesh had been sitting in on Flight AI171 when it crashed.
'It's a shock,' Owen told The Sun. 'I'm more grateful than anything else - it is such a weird coincidence.'
'You hear it every now and again about planes going down and you don't really think much of it, but when it's the actual aircraft you're potentially getting on two days later, it does make you think.'
A video posted to social media appeared to show the plane descending in a controlled manner with a high nose angle and landing gear deployed
Owen's wife, Phillipa, 30, was unaware of her husband's fate for hours as he had not told her that he had changed his plans.
Owen said he was probably one of the last people to find out about the crash, not looking at his phone for some two hours after it happened.
Phillipa, a teacher, told The Sun that she was working at the time and 'just trying to not let [the children] see or know what I was feeling' as she waited for news from Owen.
'I still feel affected by it now, to be honest with you, for days,' she said. 'I was just bursting into tears randomly.
'The way we felt is nothing compared to how the victims and their families are actually feeling, my heart really goes out to them, it's just awful.'
British father Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, 40, was identified last week as the sole survivor from the tragic incident in India.
Incredibly, the passenger of Seat 11A was able to walk away from the crash.
Astonishing footage showed him with visible injuries hobbling away from the scene of the crash. He reportedly sustained injuries to his chest, eyes and feet.
Mr Ramesh, from Leicester, was travelling home from seeing family in India when the plane crashed, hitting buildings housing doctors in the city of Ahmedabad.
Before the discovery of the British survivor, authorities said that they believed no one had escaped the flight alive. The plane had been carrying 242 people, according to police.
There were 53 British nationals on board as well as 159 Indian nationals, seven Portuguese citizens and a Canadian.
Eleven of those on board were children, including two newborns.
Indian authorities have yet to identify the cause of the disaster and have ordered inspections of Air India's Dreamliners.
Authorities announced Sunday that the second black box, the cockpit voice recorder, had been recovered. This may offer investigators more clues about what went wrong.
The Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) captures all audio from the cockpit, including pilot conversations, radio transmissions, warning alarms and ambient mechanical sounds.
It will allow investigators to finally understand what happened in the moments leading up to one of the world's worst aviation disasters in a decade.
Planes usually carry two black boxes - small but tough electronic flight data recorders made with robust materials such as titanium or steel and insulated with fire-resistant materials to withstand extreme conditions during a crash.
The first black box was recovered on Friday from the rooftop of a building at the site of the crash just 28 hours after the crash by India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB).
Authorities say it will now be easier to determine the exact cause of the crash with both the CVR and the Flight Data Recorder having been found.
Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu said Saturday he hoped decoding the first black box, the flight data recorder, would 'give an in-depth insight' into the circumstances of the crash.
Imtiyaz Ali, who was still waiting for a DNA match to find his brother, said the airline should have supported families faster.
'I'm disappointed in them. It is their duty,' said Ali, who was contacted by the airline on Saturday.
'Next step is to find out the reason for this accident. We need to know,' he told AFP.
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Air India plane crash latest: Focus turns to pilot audio after ‘extremely rare' dual engine failure suspected
Investigators have now recovered the cockpit voice recorder from last week's devastating Air India crash and will analyse the pilots' final words to help determine what caused the disaster that killed more than 270 people. The flight data recorder from flight AI171 in Ahmedabad was found earlier, and a critical loss of power from both engines is increasingly being seen as the most probable cause of the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner's sudden descent. The exact cause of the 'extremely rare' dual engine power loss on the Gatwick-bound Dreamliner remains unknown. Two more Air India flights were grounded or delayed in the past 24 hours as India 's civil aviation authority ordered urgent pre-flight checks on fuel systems, electronic engine controls, and other components across Boeing 787 aircraft in the country. Families in India with concerns can call Air India on 1800 5691 444. Those outside India can call the British Foreign Office on 020 7008 5000. Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner flight forced to turn back with technical issue – days after Ahmedabad disaster A Delhi-bound Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner flight was forced to turn back to Hong Kong on Monday after the pilot reported technical issues mid-air. The Air India flight AI 315 departed from the Asian city at 11.59 am local time for its scheduled destination in New Delhi. It reached an altitude of 22,000 feet, and then started descending, according to the flight tracking website AirNav Radar. The plane was 7 years old. Officials said the aircraft landed safely back in Hong Kong around 3.20 pm local time. Air India flight forced to return to Hong Kong after mid-air technical issue Officials said the nature of the technical issue is not immediately clear Tom Watling17 June 2025 06:00 Family of three UK citizens killed in Air India crash allege 'disjointed' response from government The grieving family of three British citizens killed in the Air India crash has criticised the UK government for a 'painfully slow' and 'disjointed' response in India. They say they've received conflicting information, lacked access to medical and forensic support, and felt abandoned by UK officials. The family of Akeel Nanabawa, Hannaa Vorajee, and their four-year-old daughter Sara Nanabawa is urging the UK government to improve its communication with relatives who travelled to Ahmedabad in Gujarat, in the aftermath of the crash. A family spokesperson told The Guardian: 'There is no UK leadership here, no medical team, no crisis professionals stationed at the hospital. 'We are forced to make appointments to see consular staff based 20 minutes away in a hotel, while our loved ones lie unidentified in an overstretched and under-resourced hospital.' Abu Nanabawa, Akeel's cousin said: 'It seems to be a universally shared sentiment of frustration at the management of this whole crisis.' He added: 'At the moment, we just want to have the bodies so that we can bury them and mourn properly. In our faith and religion [Islam], it's very important that the funeral gets done as soon as possible. It's a part of the grieving process to bury and honour them, to return them as soon as possible and grieve them.' Maroosha Muzaffar17 June 2025 05:30 Air India boss tells employees 'we will figure out' what caused crash Air India and Tata Group chairperson, N Chandrasekaran, told employees 'we will figure out' what caused the crash during an address to 700 employees. He also urged employees to remain strong and resilient following the deadly Ahmedabad plane crash, calling it the 'most heartbreaking crisis' of his career. 'Criticisms are there, and those of us who are very passionate… who are working on making this airline a great airline, and who genuinely care about what kind of a company we want to build, but it's not easy to face criticisms. I want you to be strong. If you feel distraught, the word you should remember is determination. We are going to get through this. We need to show resilience. We need to use this incident as an act of force to build a safer airline,' Mr Chandrasekaran said, according to The Indian Express. 'It's a very complex business…it's a complex machine, so a lot of redundancies, checks and balances, certifications, which have been perfected over years and years. Yet this happens, so we will figure out why it happens after the investigation. So we just have to stay calm and not put our shoulders down. This is the time to be brave, time to be resolute, time to know that you have the full support,' he told the employees. Maroosha Muzaffar17 June 2025 05:15 Air India pilot's last words moments before aircraft crashed to the ground revealed The final words of the pilot of Air India Flight AI171 that crashed on Thursday 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 12 June, killing 241 people on board and at least 29 on the ground. 'Thrust not achieved... falling... Mayday! Mayday! Mayday!' the pilot said moments before the aircraft began losing height and erupted in a fireball. 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 Watling17 June 2025 05:00 New footage shows miracle moment British survivor of Air India crash emerges from flames of wreckage This is the miraculous moment the sole survivor of the Air India crash emerges from the flames of the Boeing wreckage. New footage shows moment British survivor of Air India crash emerges from flames This is the miraculous moment the sole survivor of the Air India crash emerges from the flames of the Boeing wreckage. More than 270 people were killed when the Air India Boeing 787-8 crashed in Ahmedabad on Thursday (12 June). New footage has now emerged on social media of British man Vishwas Kumar Ramesh walking out of the crash site. The video shows Mr Ramesh walking out of flames with phone in his hand as he limps out of the deadly accident. Locals are seen helping him as black smoke engulfs the sky behind. Maroosha Muzaffar17 June 2025 04:30 Passengers deboard for safety after Mumbai-bound Air India plane faces technical issue An Air India flight from San Francisco to Mumbai via Kolkata experienced a technical issue in its left engine after landing in Kolkata, forcing passengers to deboard for safety. The delay lasted over four hours. Flight AI180 arrived at the Kolkata airport at 12.45am, when it faced a technical snag and passengers were asked to disembark. This incident occurred just five days after a deadly Air India crash that killed 241 people onboard. On Monday, another Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner returned to Hong Kong shortly after takeoff due to a 'technical issue'. The pilot decided to turn back Air India flight AI315 as a precaution, citing safety concerns. The plane landed safely and underwent checks. The plane is seven years old, Reuters reported. Maroosha Muzaffar17 June 2025 04:01 '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 Watling17 June 2025 04:00 Passengers deboard for safety after Mumbai-bound Air India plane faces technical issue An Air India flight from San Francisco to Mumbai via Kolkata experienced a technical issue in its left engine after landing in Kolkata, forcing passengers to deboard for safety. The delay lasted over four hours. Flight AI180 arrived at the Kolkata airport at 12.45am, when it faced a technical snag and passengers were asked to disembark. This incident occurred just five days after a deadly Air India crash that killed 241 people onboard. On Monday, another Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner returned to Hong Kong shortly after takeoff due to a 'technical issue'. The pilot decided to turn back Air India flight AI315 as a precaution, citing safety concerns. The plane landed safely and underwent checks. The plane is seven years old, Reuters reported. Maroosha Muzaffar17 June 2025 03:59 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. 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 Watling17 June 2025 03:00 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. Tom Watling17 June 2025 02:00


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Expert details how plane crash death toll could easily have been even larger
Although all but one of the 242 onboard the Air India Boeing 787 died following the crash, it is thought the death toll of those on the ground - said to be 29 - could have been greater The death toll of the India Air plane crash could easily have been even greater than the estimated 270 people, it is argued. More than the 29 confirmed deaths of people on the ground would have been likely had it not been for the heroic efforts of Good Samaritans who rushed to help, according to Minakshi Parikh, dean of the college, struck by the Boeing 787. He praised the actions of quick-thinking employees and students, some of whom were having lunch and missed impact by inches upon the collision. She said: "That is human nature, isn't it? When our own people are injured, our first response is to help them. So the doctors who managed to escape ... the first thing that they did was they went back in and dug out their colleagues who were trapped inside. They might not even have survived because the rescue teams take time coming." Ms Parikh believes more bodies would have pulled from the rubble had her colleagues at BJ Medical College in Ahmedabad, western India, not reacted so swiftly and bravely. It is thought 29 people in the building - and on the ground below it - have been confirmed dead, in addition to 241 people on the plane itself. Navin Chaudhary, a trainee doctor, rushed towards a window and jumped to help search for injured colleagues and students after the impact on Thursday. He said: "There was fire and many were injured... I felt that as a doctor I could save someone's life. I was safe. So I thought, whatever I can do, I should." Students also emerged from the smouldering hostel and rushed to save their friends and staff. Akshay Zala, a senior medical student, said the crash felt "like an earthquake." He said: "I could hardly see anything as thick plumes of smoke and dust engulfed everything. I was barely able to breathe." Mr Zala rushed to safety, running through dust and smoke. He cleaned and bandaged a wound on his left leg then joined others at the medical college's trauma centre to treat the injured. Many, like Ms Parikh, believe those actions and the subsequent treatment were life-saving moments. Images of the college's dining area shortly after the crash showed parts of the aircraft and pieces of luggage strewn on the floor. Dining plates still containing food lay on the few dusty tables that were left intact by the impact. The development comes as an expert has claimed new footage of the Air India disaster contains pivotal clues which could help investigators uncover why the plane crashed. Analysing a new video of the plane's sudden descent, commercial aviator Steve Schreiber said he noticed a "protrusion on the belly of the aircraft", with a "little grey dot" just below it.


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
How miracle Brit survived crash: One mile in the air… then tail strikes medical building and jet smashes into pieces before survivor walks away from flaming wreckage while talking to his dad on phone
Doomed Air India Flight 171 was airborne for just one mile before the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, carrying 242 passengers and crew, came crashing back to earth in one of India's worst ever aviation disasters. The death toll now stands at 279 as rescuers continue picking through rubble. But the miraculous escape of passenger 11A - British national Viswash Kumar Ramesh - with nothing but minor injuries has also captivated audiences and stumped experts. The Boeing jet took off from Ahmedabad's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel airport in the northwestern Indian state of Gujarat at 1:38pm local time (08:08 BST). The flight reached an altitude of just 625 feet, or 190 metres, according to flight tracking service Flightradar24. There it glided, seemingly suspended midair, but seconds later began descending rapidly as the engines appeared to give out. Captain Sumeet Sabharwal and First Officer Clive Kunder had already placed a mayday call, but they had little over a minute between lifting off from the tarmac and suffering their fatal crash. The underside of their jet smashed into a building housing trainee doctors working at the nearby BJ Medical College and Civil Hospital, killing dozens more civilians. Now, as India's aviation authorities conduct their investigations and medical staff perform the grim task of identifying the remains of the dead for burial, this is how the final journey of Air India flight 171 played out. The crash A selection of footage emerged in the hours following the crash that showed Flight 171's entire flight from takeoff to crash. The takeoff appeared perfectly normal, but within seconds of leaving the runway the passenger jet appeared frozen in mid-air, unable to gain altitude. Aviation experts believe the Boeing 787 Dreamliner may suddenly lost power 'at the most critical phase of flight' after takeoff. The possible causes are believed to include a rapid change in wind or a bird strike leading to a double-engine stall. Commercial airline pilot Steve Schreiber, who analyses plane crashes and close calls, said a new HD-quality video is a 'gamechanger' in diagnosing the cause and suggested the footage supported the dual engine failure theory. He pointed out that in the footage, a small device is seen extended underneath the plane's fuselage, known as the Ram Access Turbine (RAT), whose function is to support the aircraft's electrical power and hydraulic pressure in an emergency. Schreiber said that on a 787 there are three things that will deploy the RAT automatically: a massive electrical failure; a massive hydraulic failure; or a dual engine failure. The plane's flight path would have taken it directly above the B.J. Medical College and Civil Hospital along with a residential street. The plane came down 1.6 kilometres - almost exactly one mile, from the end of the runway, and just a few hundred metres shy of the medical facility. Ahmedabad residents who witnessed the crash explained how the aircraft banked slightly to avoid apartment buildings in the final seconds before impact. Ahmedabad residents who witnessed the crash explained how the aircraft banked slightly to avoid apartment buildings in the final seconds before impact Unfortunately, the underside of the jet, including the landing gear and part of its tail, clipped a dormitory for staff working at the hospital. The machinery smashed through the upper levels of the building and triggered a fire in which more than 30 people, mostly medical students, perished. With the landing gear and plane's tail left embedded in the stricken structure, the rest of the jet skidded into a grassy area a stone's throw away from residential properties - narrowly averting an even greater catastrophe. The jet was heavily fuelled for the long-haul flight to London, which ignited and quickly whipped up a brutal inferno seconds after impact. Residents of the nearby apartments hailed the pilot, Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, 56, as a hero for avoiding their homes and saving yet more lives in the process. 'Thanks to the pilot Captain Sabharwal, we survived. He's a hero. It is because of him we are alive,' resident Jahanvi Rajput, 28, told The Sun. 'The green space next to us was visible to him and that's where he went.' Mum-of-two Chancal Bai, 50, added: 'If the plane had crashed into this residential area, there would have been hundreds more victims.' The miraculous escape The sole survivor of the disaster told reporters how he 'just walked out' of the damaged jet as it lay at the crash site moments before it was engulfed in flames. Viswash Ramesh, 40, said that he was in India with his brother for the best part of a year to visit relatives and was returning home to Leicester. He was seated in 11A on the doomed flight from Ahmedabad. While sitting up on a hospital bed, he told DD India this weekend that he 'can't explain' everything that he witnessed as the plane plummeted to the ground. But he recalled that lights on board the plane began 'flickering green and white' when the engines seemed to lose thrust. As the plane ground to a halt, it rotated on its axis, leaving Ramesh's side of the jet closer to the ground and allowing him to practically step off the plane without suffering further injury. 'The emergency door was broken, my seat is broken,' he said. Asked if he escaped the plane by jumping to the ground, he replied: 'I am not jumping. I just walked out.' 'It's a miracle,' he said when discussing his survival and injuries, explaining how a rupture in the plane's fuselage left enough space for him to squeeze through. 'I managed to unbuckle myself, used my leg to push through that opening, and crawled out,' he said, adding that he saw 'people dying in front of my eyes'. He cut into an adjacent street as the jet fuel ignited and narrowly escaped the inferno. Stunning footage seems to uphold his account - Ramesh is seen emerging from the wreckage and stumbling toward gobsmacked onlookers while clasping his phone as he called his father. A thick cloud of black smoke is seen emanating from the disaster site just over his shoulder. Speaking to Indian press, Ramesh's dumbstruck doctor said: 'He has minor injuries only. He has some abrasions over his left forearm and swelling over left eyelid and over the eyes. 'Chest and abdomen is clear, no lung fractures present. The patient is vitally stable.' The aftermath Emergency and rescue services say they have recovered more than 270 bodies from the site, including around 30 people killed when the plane hit the medical dormitory. 279 people are believed to have died in the tragedy. Indian authorities have so far handed over the remains of 47 victims, and the bodies of 92 others have been identified through DNA matching and will be transferred to relatives soon. The first funerals for some of the victims have been held in Ahmedabad, but relatives of the dead have complained about delays and a lack of communication from authorities. 'They said it would take 48 hours. But it's been four days and we haven't received any response,' said Rinal Christian, 23, whose elder brother was a passenger on the jetliner. 'My brother was the sole breadwinner of the family,' Christian said on Sunday. 'So what happens next?' Among the latest victims identified was Vijay Rupani, a senior member of India's ruling party and former chief minister of Gujarat state. His flag-draped coffin was carried in Ahmedabad by soldiers, along with a portrait of the politician draped in a garland of flowers. Meanwhile, investigators from India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) are now analysing the wreckage of the jet along with the contents of the black boxes recovered from the crash site. These small but tough electronic flight data recorders are made with robust materials such as titanium or steel and insulated with fire-resistant materials to withstand extreme conditions during a crash. The aircraft crashed into the densely populated Meghani Nagar area near Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport, resulting in a massive explosion and fire due to the heavy fuel load for the international journey Relatives bury the coffins containing the remains of Rozar David Christian and his wife, Rachnaben Rozar Christian, both victims of the Air India plane crash, at a cemetery in Ahmedabad, India, Sunday, June 15, 2025 People gather for a funeral procession of former Chief Minister of Gujarat Vijay Rupani, who died when an Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner plane crashed during take-off, in Rajkot, Gujarat, India, June 16, 2025 One records flight data, such as altitude and speed and the other contains the Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR), capturing all audio from the cockpit, including pilot conversations, radio transmissions, warning alarms and ambient mechanical sounds. The devices should allow investigators to piece together a second-by-second reconstruction of the events that led to the fatal fireball. Alongside the formal investigation into Flight 171's demise by the AAIB, the Indian government has set up a high-level committee to examine the causes leading to the crash. The committee will focus on formulating procedures to prevent and handle aircraft emergencies in the future, the Ministry of Civil Aviation said in a statement Saturday. Authorities have also begun inspecting Air India's entire fleet of Boeing 787 Dreamliners, Minister of Civil Aviation Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu said Saturday in New Delhi at his first news briefing since the crash on Thursday. Eight of the 34 Dreamliners in India have already undergone inspection, Kinjarapu said, adding that the remaining aircraft will be examined with 'immediate urgency.' It comes as another Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner plane bound for New Delhi turned back to its departure airport in Hong Kong early Monday morning after the pilot suspected a technical issue mid-air, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters. Flight AI315 took off from Hong Kong at 12:16pm local time and landed just over an hour later, according to tracking data on Flightradar24. Boeing and Air India did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Hong Kong-New Delhi flight.