
‘Need to have something that tells us they are gone': At Ahmedabad hospital, long night for kin of crash victims
'We know we won't be able to bear watching the condition in which their remains are. But, we need to have something that tells us they are gone. What will we tell others at home?'
Hyderabad resident Salma Rafiq Memon is inconsolable as she waits outside the Kasauti Bhavan at Ahmedabad Civil Hospital on Saturday.
Her nephew Javed, along with his wife Maryam and their two children, was on the Air India 171 flight that crashed in the city on Thursday.
Her other nephew Imtiaz, Javed's brother, flew down from Mumbai on Friday to give his samples for DNA matching.
Though families have been informed that it will take at least 72 hours for the results of the DNA tests to come out, many like Salma could not help but make their way to the hospital on Saturday, perhaps in an attempt to make sense of the harsh reality of their loss.
The Memons are a large and closely knit clan scattered across Mumbai, Hyderabad, and parts of Madhya Pradesh.
Javed was in Mumbai last week for Bakrid, and also to visit his mother who underwent a heart surgery two months back. 'We have been lying to her for the last two days. She has begun suspecting that something is amiss, and asking where all the family members are. We are so scared of telling her… But we will take the remains home so that there is a finality to the loss,' says Salma.
Anil Patel, who lost his son Harshit and daughter-in-law Pooja, is also at the hospital, hoping to get some information. 'I was told by an official that the remains will be given to us in a packed state and we will have to complete the last rites soon,' says Patel.
The families have been told that whatever luggage could be salvaged has been kept in a storage. Once the identification of the bodies is complete, they will also be asked to identify the luggage and valuables.
Officials say while some of the bodies are charred due to the explosion, others have some body parts missing. The challenge is to hand them over in 'a dignified manner' so that the families can conduct last rites, they add. While blood samples have been taken of the kin, they are, in some cases, being matched with multiple remains. Kept in a postmortem room at the hospital with temperatures to match adequate safe-keeping, the bodies will be handed over as and when the tests confirm the identities, says an official.
'We have no option but to wait. It is difficult to come to terms (with the loss) without seeing the bodies,' says Patel as he waits outside Kasauti Bhavan, an examination room that is temporarily serving as a centre to collect the samples for DNA test.
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Mint
9 hours ago
- Mint
Air India crash: 32 of 241 victims onboard identified via DNA tests; 14 bodies handed over to kin 3 days after tragedy
Three days after the London-bound Air India 171 flight crashed into BJ medical college moments after taking off, authorities have so far identified 32 victims through DNA testing and bodies of 14 have been handed over to their families, an official said on Sunday. A total of 241 passengers and crew on board were killed in the tragedy besides 29, including 5 MBBS students, who died at the college mess in Meghaninagar area. One British passenger miraculously survived. The victims identified so far were from different places in Gujarat and Rajasthan, he said. "Thirty two DNA samples have matched till now, and 14 bodies have already been handed over to the respective families. These deceased were from Udaipur, Vadodara, Kheda, Mehsana, Arvalli, Ahmedabad and Botad districts," Additional civil superintendent Dr Rajnish Patel mentioned. As many of the bodies were burnt beyond recognition or damaged otherwise, authorities are carrying out DNA tests to establish the identity of victims of the horrific tragedy. The process of DNA matching of former Gujarat chief minister Vijay Rupani, who also died in the June 12 plane crash, was underway, Patel told reporters. As many as 230 teams were formed to coordinate with the victims' families, officials earlier said. Gujarat Relief Commissioner and Revenue Secretary Alok Pandey informed reporters on Saturday that, to prevent any administrative difficulties, the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation will issue death certificates on the spot. Following this, the village patwari will promptly provide a family relation card to ensure that families do not encounter any issues related to inheritance. "A grief counsellor will be assigned to every family to deal with the mental trauma," Alok stated.


Hindustan Times
15 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
DNA of 19 victims matched, more remains discovered
Doctors in Ahmedabad worked round the clock to match blood and DNA samples to slivers of charred remains, forensic investigators combed through mangled pieces of metal for human parts, and rescuers cut through the wreckage to pull out bodies on Saturday as authorities struggled to arrive at the final toll of India's worst single-aircraft tragedy. Officials said they pulled out three bodies from the debris on Saturday, adding to the already staggering toll from the Thursday afternoon crash of the London-bound Air India 171 flight just outside Ahmedabad airport, even as it became clear that people had died not just on the plane or in the hostel it slammed into, but also the neighbourhood. The government has confirmed that only one of the 242 people on board the plane survived, and eight bodies of people who died at the BJ Medical College hostel were handed over to their families on Friday. In addition, the 15-year-old son of a tea-seller who was sleeping under a tree, Akash Patni, was confirmed dead as well. Around 20 more people – all on the ground – were feared dead, but confusion reigned on the exact number. 'As of Friday, the death toll stood at 270. Today, we recovered three additional bodies, including one from the tail section of the aircraft. Search and recovery operations for the remaining victims continue,' a police official stated. But Dhaval Gameti, president of the Junior Doctors Association at B.J. Medical College, told reporters that at least 270 bodies were recovered from the site of the crash. 'The eight bodies handed to the families on Friday did not need DNA identification. They had died after the wall collapsed. But 11 passenger bodies were examined for DNA sampling on Saturday because of the burn injuries. It matched with the blood samples given by the victims,' said medical college dean Meenakshi Desai, adding that the hospital authorities were waiting for four families to give their samples. Later in the evening, state home minister Harsh Sanghavi said in a post on X that the matching process for 19 victims was completed. 'DNA Matching Progress: 19 DNA samples have been matched so far, confirming the identities of victims,' he said. Emergency services continued recovery efforts, extracting a badly burnt body from the wreckage on Saturday before cranes were deployed to clear debris. DNA identification is underway to confirm victim identities, with relatives, some traveling to India, providing samples to assist. The flight carried 169 Indian, 53 British, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian passenger, along with 12 crew members. The deceased include at least four medical students and two of their relatives who were inside the hostel where the plane crashed. Only one British nation, Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, survived. Three forensic science laboratory teams were engaged in DNA sample analysis, and so far, blood samples from 248 relatives were collected, a Civil Hospital official said on condition of anonymity. At the Trauma Centre, the health department deployed five teams comprising around 100 specialists and assistants in orthopaedics, neurology, medicine, plastic surgery, and burns. Additionally, a team of 32 experts and 20 assistants was stationed at the post-mortem room, while 12 experts were operating at the testing facility of B.J. Medical College. The DNA matching process is being conducted with support from the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) and the National Forensic Science University (NFSU). Hospital authorities have established strict protocols. A close relative who provided the DNA sample should come in person to collect the body. If unavailable, other close family members may collect the body. If the person who gave the DNA sample cannot come personally, they must send an authorised representative with a proper authority letter. Some relatives expressed frustration that the process was taking too long. Authorities say it normally takes up to 72 hours to complete DNA matching and they are expediting the process. Navib Sheikh, who lost four members of his family, asked, 'The doctors are saying it will take 72 hours. The mother of the girl who died does not know that her daughter is no more. We gave the DNA samples on the day the incident took place. Why is it taking so long?' Sheikh's relatives Mariam Ali Syed, her husband Javed, and their two children, Zayn, 5, and Amani, 4, perished. State Emergency Commissioner Alok Pandey said the deceased were from 18 of Gujarat's 33 districts. 'A grief counsellor has been appointed for each family to address the mental trauma. The families of the 11 foreign nationals have also been contacted, and they will arrive here by noon tomorrow,' he added. Dean Desai said, 'The forensic science laboratory is working round-the-clock to match the samples. We hope to release the report of 10-20 samples every day. The bodies of the passengers are being handled in a dignified way.' Explaining the process, Desai said that the tissue from bones and teeth of charred bodies were taken up for DNA profiling. ' Taking samples in case of a charred body is possible but it takes time. In case of immediate relatives, the results are delivered immediately. For distant relatives, it may take time. But all bodies will be identified and handed to the families for a dignified funeral.' Throughout Saturday, families of those who died in the crash continued to wait outside the mortuary. Among them was Yash Mistry, a resident of Anand in Gujarat, whose sister, Kinal, was among the passengers on the Air India flight. 'This morning, a police inspector explained the process. We have been given a slip with a number. The hospital authorities said that each one of us will get a call, once the body is identified. We have been told to present this slip containing the number at the counter in the hospital. Once they match the number and our identity, then the bodies will be returned.' Police officials at the mortuary said that each passenger, whose identity was not known, too was assigned a number. 'The number and the blood sample given by the relatives is matched. This is how the bodies will be handed. We have told the relatives not to stand in this heat outside the mortuary and urged them to return to the accommodation provided by the government until then,' they added. Aamir, whose brother Irfan Sheikh, a flight crew member, is suspected to be among the dead, said the hospital authorities said that the body would be handed in by Saturday night or soon. 'We are hoping to receive a call from the hospital anytime. Each time the phone rings, we hope this is a call from them. We want to take our brother home at the earliest.'


Indian Express
a day ago
- Indian Express
‘Need to have something that tells us they are gone': At Ahmedabad hospital, long night for kin of crash victims
'We know we won't be able to bear watching the condition in which their remains are. But, we need to have something that tells us they are gone. What will we tell others at home?' Hyderabad resident Salma Rafiq Memon is inconsolable as she waits outside the Kasauti Bhavan at Ahmedabad Civil Hospital on Saturday. Her nephew Javed, along with his wife Maryam and their two children, was on the Air India 171 flight that crashed in the city on Thursday. Her other nephew Imtiaz, Javed's brother, flew down from Mumbai on Friday to give his samples for DNA matching. Though families have been informed that it will take at least 72 hours for the results of the DNA tests to come out, many like Salma could not help but make their way to the hospital on Saturday, perhaps in an attempt to make sense of the harsh reality of their loss. The Memons are a large and closely knit clan scattered across Mumbai, Hyderabad, and parts of Madhya Pradesh. Javed was in Mumbai last week for Bakrid, and also to visit his mother who underwent a heart surgery two months back. 'We have been lying to her for the last two days. She has begun suspecting that something is amiss, and asking where all the family members are. We are so scared of telling her… But we will take the remains home so that there is a finality to the loss,' says Salma. Anil Patel, who lost his son Harshit and daughter-in-law Pooja, is also at the hospital, hoping to get some information. 'I was told by an official that the remains will be given to us in a packed state and we will have to complete the last rites soon,' says Patel. The families have been told that whatever luggage could be salvaged has been kept in a storage. Once the identification of the bodies is complete, they will also be asked to identify the luggage and valuables. Officials say while some of the bodies are charred due to the explosion, others have some body parts missing. The challenge is to hand them over in 'a dignified manner' so that the families can conduct last rites, they add. While blood samples have been taken of the kin, they are, in some cases, being matched with multiple remains. Kept in a postmortem room at the hospital with temperatures to match adequate safe-keeping, the bodies will be handed over as and when the tests confirm the identities, says an official. 'We have no option but to wait. It is difficult to come to terms (with the loss) without seeing the bodies,' says Patel as he waits outside Kasauti Bhavan, an examination room that is temporarily serving as a centre to collect the samples for DNA test.