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EXCLUSIVE First funeral of British Air India crash victim: Mourners gather to pay tribute to mother-of-two killed in tragedy

EXCLUSIVE First funeral of British Air India crash victim: Mourners gather to pay tribute to mother-of-two killed in tragedy

Daily Mail​13 hours ago

The first funeral of a British Air India crash victim has taken place just hours after her body was released to her family.
Mother of two Elcina Alpesh Makwana, 42, was visiting India for dental work and was staying with her parents. She is the first of 53 British nationals to die in the crash whose remains were returned by authorities.
Ms Makwana, who lived in Hounslow, London, was described as 'gentle' and incredibly hard-working. Her body was formally identified through DNA testing and taken to Pensionpora Cemetery Vadodara in Gujarat on Sunday morning for funeral rites.
Her husband Alpesh, 52, and her two children, aged seven and 11, flew out to India and arrived on Saturday ahead of a Roman Catholic service.
Joseph Patelia, her uncle, described her as a 'gentle soul'.
He said: 'Before take-off, she called her father to say she'd boarded safely and would call again once she landed.
'That call never came. She vanished just like that leaving us in shock, in tears, unable to believe what we were hearing.
'It's been a nightmare for the family.'
She is the first of 53 British nationals to die in the crash whose remains were returned by authorities. Pictured: A video posted to social media appearing to show the plane descending in a controlled manner with a high nose angle and landing gear deployed
He revealed that Ms Makwana, who previously ran a telecoms business with her husband, visited India regularly.
He added: 'She travelled alone, and her husband Alpesh and their two young children, an 11-year-old daughter and a 7-year-old son, arrived here on Saturday.'
Paying tribute to his niece, Mr Patelia said she supported poor children in India by paying for their education.
He said: 'She had struggled a lot in life, moving to London over 15 years ago, taking on part-time jobs to support her family there and her parents here in India. She had no brothers, so she took on every responsibility herself.
'Her loss is devastating. She was the bond that held our entire family together.'

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Mother plans to run around Cornwall coast in six days

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The Independent

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  • The Independent

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Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

New video of doomed Air India flight 'shows Boeing 787 did lose power' just before crash killed 242 passengers and ploughed into residential area

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The evidence that the crash could have been caused by dual-engine failure was ruled out by Aviation Herald - who reported on the crash from India. But Mr Schreiber said he thinks the publication 'probably got that wrong' based on the evidence he has seen. Although the evidence gives 'a lot more clarity' on the crash, he believes it also sends the investigation 'back to square one' because he has no idea why both engines on a 787 would flame out right after take off. The new video emerged as it was revealed to be the original footage of a clip that was shared around the world, which had in fact been a recording of a video on a person's phone. Mr Schreiber explained: 'The video that we all saw was a video of a video and the quality was extremely poor. The original is much sharper. What happened was some cameraman was standing in front of the screen watching the video play. You can see him at the end of it. The audio is not very good and the visual is not very good.' The clarity of the original video along with the original audio helped him come to his new conclusion on the cause of the crash. It comes as the pilot of the India Air plane has been hailed a hero by locals after it emerged that he diverted the jet a the last second to avoid an apartment block, saving the lives of 18 families. The families are convinced they owe their lives to Captain Semeet Sabharwal - who diverted the plane which was heading towards them when it began to rapidly descent after take off, The Sun reported. Captain Sabharwal managed to divert the plane towards a patch of grassland instead. Locals in Ahmedabad fled their homes when the plane erupted into a fireball next to a medical college. The top two floors of a disused four-storey military building were destroyed by the crash. A fire then tore through the college's hostel and killed dozens of students and staff who were eating in the canteen. Captain Sabharwal, 55, was an experienced pilot with more than 8,200 hours of flying time and the son of an officer with India's civil aviation authority. He was the main carer for his father, now in his 80s and called him before taking off. The UK's Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) announced on Friday night that four of its investigators had arrived in India and have expertise in aircraft operations, engineering and recorded data. The 'release of information on the investigation rests solely with the Indian authorities', it added. Air India said there were 169 Indian passengers, 53 British, seven Portuguese and a Canadian on board the flight, as well as 12 crew members. MailOnline previously revealed the British victims were Akeel Nanawaba, Hannaa Vorajee and their daughter Sarah, 4, Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek, Javed Ali Syed, his wife and two children, Raxa Modha, her grandson Rudra and her daughter-in-law Yasha Kamdar, and Ajay Kumar Ramesh, the brother of the tragedy's only survivor.

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