logo
Air India flight bound for London crashes at India's Ahmedabad airport

Air India flight bound for London crashes at India's Ahmedabad airport

Yahooa day ago

LONDON − A London-bound Air India passenger plane with more than 200 people on board crashed shortly after taking off from an airport in India's western city of Ahmedabad, the airline and police officials said June 12.
City police chief G.S. Malik told Reuters that 204 bodies had been recovered from the crash site. The BBC reported that at least one passenger, a British national identified as Vishwash Kumar Ramesh on the flight manifest, survived the crash and was undergoing treatment at a local hospital.
Malik said the bodies recovered could include both passengers and people killed on the ground.Relatives had been asked to give DNA samples to identify the dead, state health secretary Dhananjay Dwivedi said.
Authorities have yet to release any information about what may have caused the crash.
The plane was headed to London's Gatwick airport, Air India said. A police statement said it crashed in a civilian area near the airport. Early reports suggested the plane may have come down on a hostel housing doctors. "We are ascertaining the details and will share further updates," Air India said in a statement.
Air India plane crash: What we know so far about passengers, where they were going
According to local media, the crash occurred as the aircraft was taking off from Ahmedabad airport, which is about 600 miles southwest of India's capital, New Delhi. TV visuals showed people being moved in stretchers and taken away in ambulances. Thick black smoke rose into the sky near the airport.
The Boeing 787-8 aircraft was carrying 242 passengers and crew members. Air India said of these, 169 were Indian nationals; 53 were British; 7 were Portuguese; and one was Canadian.
No Americans were reported on board.
"I was in my office when the plane crashed and there was a loud thud," Darshna Vaghela, a local politician, told reporters at the scene, according to the BBC. "We rescued many doctors from their flats."India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he was "stunned and saddened" by the crash. Britain's King Charles and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer released statements saying they were being updated.
Air India flight 171 was operated by an 11.5-year-old Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, according to airfleets.net, an industry website. The plane had been in Air India's fleet since it left the production line.
The flight was helmed by Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, who reportedly had over 8,000 hours of flying experience. The co-pilot had over 1,100 hours logged flying time, according to CNN.
This is the first-ever hull loss involving a Boeing 787 since its entry into service in 2011.
Boeing posted a statement on X, saying: "We are in contact with Air India regarding Flight 171 and stand ready to support them. Our thoughts are with the passengers, crew, first responders and all affected."
Flightradar24 data shows the aircraft, identified as VT-ANB, had flown from New Delhi to Ahmedabad earlier in the day. The plane last sent a signal to airport authorities when it was at 625 feet in the air.
(This story was updated to add new information.)
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Air India plane crashes at India's Ahmedabad airport

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US appeals court won't reconsider Trump's $5 million loss to E. Jean Carroll
US appeals court won't reconsider Trump's $5 million loss to E. Jean Carroll

USA Today

time19 minutes ago

  • USA Today

US appeals court won't reconsider Trump's $5 million loss to E. Jean Carroll

US appeals court won't reconsider Trump's $5 million loss to E. Jean Carroll A divided 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has left intact its Dec. 30 decision upholding a $5 million verdict against Donald Trump Show Caption Hide Caption Judges deliberating on Trump's E. Jean Carroll appeal Judges are deliberating on whether the jury that awarded E. Jean Carroll $5 million should have been allowed to hear other allegations. NEW YORK, June 13 (Reuters) - Donald Trump failed to persuade a federal appeals court to reconsider the $5 million verdict won by E. Jean Carroll after a jury found that the U.S. president sexually abused and defamed the former magazine columnist. A divided 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan on June 13 left intact its Dec. 30, 2024, decision upholding the jury award. Carroll, now 81, accused Trump of attacking her around 1996 in a Bergdorf Goodman department store dressing room in Manhattan, and defaming her in an October 2022 Truth Social post by denying her claim as a hoax. More: Trump loses appeal of sexual abuse and defamation judgment in E. Jean Carroll case Jurors decided in May 2023 that Trump had sexually assaulted Carroll, and defamed her by lying. They did not find that Trump raped Carroll, as she had claimed. More: Did Donald Trump rape E. Jean Carroll? Here's what a jury and judge said. In seeking reconsideration, Trump maintained that the trial judge erred in letting jurors review the 2005 "Access Hollywood" video of him bragging about his sexual prowess, and a "pile-on" of inflammatory evidence that he mistreated two other women. One, businesswoman Jessica Leeds, said Trump groped her on a plane in the late 1970s. The other, former People magazine writer Natasha Stoynoff, said Trump forcibly kissed her at his Mar-a-Lago estate in 2005. Trump has denied their claims. More: Jury finds Donald Trump liable in civil sex abuse case of E. Jean Carroll Trump, who turns 79 on June 14, is separately appealing an $83.3 million jury verdict in January 2024 for defaming Carroll and damaging her reputation in June 2019, when he first denied her claim about the Bergdorf encounter. The president is arguing in that appeal that the U.S. Supreme Court's decision last July providing him substantial criminal immunity shields him from liability in Carroll's civil case. In his 2019 and 2022 denials of Carroll's accusations, Trump said she was "not my type" and had made up the rape claim to promote her memoir.

U.S. Steel shares slip as Nippon Steel faces Trump's hurdle over control
U.S. Steel shares slip as Nippon Steel faces Trump's hurdle over control

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

U.S. Steel shares slip as Nippon Steel faces Trump's hurdle over control

(Reuters) -Shares of U.S. Steel dipped in premarket trading after a Nippon Steel executive told the Japanese Nikkei newspaper that its planned acquisition of the company required "a degree of management freedom" to go ahead, after President Donald Trump said he would exercise "total control" over the U.S. steelmaker. The comments signal that last-minute discussions continue regarding the structure of the deal, which was opposed by then-U.S. President Joe Biden and Trump when it was first proposed. Trump said on Thursday that the U.S. will have "a golden share" in U.S. Steel. "It's 51% ownership by Americans," Trump said while speaking to reporters at the White House. He did not provide details on how the arrangement would be structured. The $14.9 billion deal was first announced in December 2023 to opposition across the U.S. political spectrum, and has run a long, uncertain route in the year-and-a-half since. U.S. Steel shares fell 4% in premarket trading on Friday. Trump's public comments, ranging from welcoming a simple "investment" in U.S. Steel by the Japanese firm to floating a minority stake for Nippon Steel, have created confusion. Last month, Trump told reporters the deal still lacked his final approval, leaving unresolved whether he would allow Nippon Steel to take ownership. Sign in to access your portfolio

Disruption as airlines cancel flights and reroute planes to avoid Middle East airspace
Disruption as airlines cancel flights and reroute planes to avoid Middle East airspace

CNN

time36 minutes ago

  • CNN

Disruption as airlines cancel flights and reroute planes to avoid Middle East airspace

Global air traffic has been disrupted following Israel's strikes on Iran Friday, with several major airlines suspending flights to and from locations in the Middle East and rerouting their planes to avoid much of the region's airspace. The airspace above Iran and Israel as well as Jordan, Syria and Iraq emptied of commercial flights on Friday, according to flight-tracking site Flightradar24. Israel, Iran and Jordan all closed their airspace in the wake of the attack, while Iran suspended all domestic and international flights, the country's state-affiliated Fars news agency reported on Friday, citing the civil aviation authority. Tehran's Mehrabad Airport, Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Airport and Amman's Queen Alia International Airport all closed on Friday. Mehrabad will remain closed until 1:30 a.m. on Saturday, state news agency IRNA reported on Friday afternoon, while Ben Gurion is shut until further notice, the Israel Airports Authority said early Friday morning. Queen Alia International Airport didn't say when it would reopen, advising passengers to contact their airlines. As the strikes on Iran unfolded overnight, several flights were diverted or returned to their origin. Air India, the country's flagship carrier, said on X that more than a dozen of its flights had been affected 'due to the emerging situation in Iran,' including routes from New York, London, Vancouver and Washington. One Delta Air Lines flight from New York's John F. Kennedy Airport to Tel Aviv flew for eight hours only to end up back at JFK, according to Flightradar24. Meanwhile, Israeli carriers El Al, Israir and Arkia evacuated their planes out of Israel as the country braced for retaliation from Iran, Reuters reported. Data on Flightradar24 shows several planes leaving Tel Aviv airport on Friday morning, several of them headed to nearby Cyprus. Hermes, Cyprus' airports operator, said 32 flights from the Middle East had been diverted to Larnaca and Paphos airports as of Friday morning, Reuters reported. Throughout Friday, airline after airline announced it was suspending its flights to and from various cities in the region. German carrier Lufthansa said flights to Tehran and Tel Aviv had been suspended until July 31, and its flights to Amman, Beirut and Erbil in Iraqi Kurdistan until June 20. Emirates, one of the United Arab Emirates' flagship carriers, said it had canceled its flights to and from Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and Iran until Sunday. Air France told CNN in a statement that it had suspended flights to Tel Aviv until further notice, while its sister company Dutch carrier KLM said on its website that it will not fly to Tel Aviv until at least July 1. Delta Air Lines warned that travel to, from or through Tel Aviv may be affected until June 30. Qatar Airways has 'temporarily cancelled flights to Iran and Iraq,' the airline said in a statement. Three major airports in Iran, including in the capital Tehran, and five airports in Iraq, including its capital Baghdad, have been affected, the airline said. CNN's Jessie Yeung, Helen Regan and Mostafa Salem contributed reporting.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store