
Air India plane crash: Search on for black box, probe underway
A search is underway for the black box of the Ahmedabad-London Air India plane that crashed in Ahmedabad on Thursday. At least 265 people were killed after the plane crashed into two hostels near Ahmedabad airport.Earlier today, Air India debunked reports of the recovery of black box and termed them mere speculation. Air India has said that the black box of the crashed flight, which would provide crucial information about what went wrong, has not been recovered.advertisementOn Friday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the plane crash site and later met the survivors at the Ahmedabad Civil Hospital.
PLANE CRASH: UDPATES SO FAR
Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the crash site of the Air India plane accident on Friday along with Civil Aviation Minister Kinjarapu Rammohan Naidu. The PM inspected the crash site along with other officials.
PM wrote on X, "Visited the crash site in Ahmedabad today. The scene of devastation is saddening. Met officials and teams working tirelessly in the aftermath. Our thoughts remain with those who lost their loved ones in this unimaginable tragedy."
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After visiting the crash site, PM Modi headed to the Ahmedabad Civil Hospital where he met the survivors of the plane crash. PM wrote on X, "Met those injured in the aftermath of the tragic plane crash in Ahmedabad, including the lone survivor and assured them that we are with them and their families in this tough time. The entire nation is praying for their speedy recovery."
Meanwhile, families of those killed in the plane crash lined up outside Ahmedabad Civil hospital in Ahmedabad and gave their DNA samples to match with the bodies. Most of the bodies were charred beyond recognition.
All 261 passengers, except the one in seat 11A, died in the plane crash. Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, a British national, was seated in 11A, next to the emergency door on the left side of the aircraft. He said the plane broke apart shortly after take-off, and his seat was flung clear of the wreckage. As a result, he was shielded from the flames that engulfed the rest of the aircraft.
The temperature in and around the crashed Air India plane rose to around 1,000 degrees Celsius, which made the rescue operation extremely difficult, officials told PTI. Even dogs and birds at the site could not escape, they said.
Besides passengers and crew members, students in the medical college's hostels and some others on the premises were among those killed in the tragedy. While police said 265 bodies were brought to the civil hospital, officials were yet to announce the death toll.
advertisementA State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) official said their personnel reached the hostel and residential quarters of doctors and staff members of the BJ Medical College, where the aircraft crashed, between 2 to 2.30 pm. Before that, locals had pulled out some people alive but their teams did not get anybody alive.
Two pilots, Captain Sumeet Sabharwal and First Officer Clive Kunder, met a cruel end on Thursday as the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner they were in charge of, crashed. Both were operating the Dreamliner to London's Gatwick Airport, carrying 230 passengers and 10 crew members.
So far, five victims have been identified, and their bodies handed over to their families: two each from Gujarat and Rajasthan, and one from Madhya Pradesh.
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India Gazette
26 minutes ago
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Air India disaster death toll climbs to 270
The UK-bound flight crashed seconds after take-off from Ahmedabad, killing all but one of 242 passengers The death toll from the Air India crash on Thursday has risen to 270, making it one of the deadliest disasters of its kind in the country's history. The plane slammed into a medical college dormitory, leaving one survivor from the flight. Search and rescue workers recovered more bodies from the site late Friday, pushing the death toll higher, officials told media on Saturday. The authorities had earlier put the body count at 265. "Around 270 bodies have been brought to the civil hospital so far from the plane crash site," Dr. Dhaval Gamet at the Civil Hospital in Ahmedabad told reporters on Saturday. He added that the only survivor was still under observation for some of his wounds. In an interview with India's public broadcaster Doodarshan on Saturday, the survivor, 40-year-old UK national of Indian origin Ramesh Vishwashkumar said he "jumped out" of the plans seconds after it crashed when he realized there was some space near his seat. He said he couldn't believe he'd made it out of the burning plane alive, even as he saw people dying around him. Families of the victims are still waiting to receive the bodies of their loved ones. A relative of several passengers who are believed to have died in the crash told RT on Friday that he had given his blood for DNA profiling upon arrival in Ahmedabad, but has not yet received any news about the deceased. "I'm here since yesterday; I gave my blood test. So far there were no bodies of them," he said. Doctors have been working without breaks to gather dental samples from the deceased to run identification checks and conduct DNA profiling, Hindustan Times reported. The process of handing over bodies has been slow because of the extent of the damage. "Some of the bodies are charred beyond recognition," one official told the newspaper. The flight, operated by Air India, had just taken off from Ahmedabad when it lost altitude and crashed into a medical college dormitory. Engine failure and poor visibility have been cited as possible factors, though the exact cause is still under investigation. Authorities from India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation are examining flight data and cockpit recordings retrieved on Friday. Meanwhile, New Delhi's aviation regulator has asked Air India to carry out maintenance on its Boeing 787-8/9 aircraft immediately. These include a review of all take-off parameters and aircraft checks over the last two weeks, according to a notification issued by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation.


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NDTV
an hour ago
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1st Responder Was Having Lunch At Hostel Where Air India Plane Crashed
Ahmedabad: 108 Ambulance driver Satinder Singh Sandhu was having lunch when he heard a loud explosion. One look outside one of the hostels of the BJ Medical College campus and he saw the makings of a great tragedy - thick black smoke and chaos. His phone rang and he rushed to the place where the smoke was emanating from to find an aircraft crashed and on fire. Air India's London-bound flight had plummeted from a height of 625 feet and crashed into the hostel campus in Meghaninagar around 1.39 pm. By 1.43 pm, Mr Sandhu reached the spot, alerting the ambulance service manager Jitendra Shahi on the way. "There has probably been a plane crash. Send the fire brigade," he is heard telling Mr Shahi in a call recording accessed by NDTV. The first person Mr Sandhu saw emerging from the crash site was a heavily burnt security guard. He told NDTV that he also saw the lone survivor of the crashed AI171 aircraft walking from the plane and then attempting to go back to save his relative on board. Unfortunately, Vishwas Kumar Ramesh's relative was among the 241 on board that died in Thursday's crash. The ambulance driver then rushed Mr Ramesh to the hospital, where he underwent treatment. By 1.46 pm, five 108 ambulances reached the spot and started rescue work, and in the next 10 minutes, over 20 more ambulances were at the ready. "We first shifted 15-20 people emerging from the hostel to the ambulance," Mr Shahi said. While expressing disbelief that there was survivor in the plane crash, Mr Shahi said the situation on ground was scary. "We are prepared for such situations and we have successfully conducted rescue operations in the past. But this time, there were so many casualties in one place. The recent security drills (held around the time Operation Sindoor was launched) prepared us for dealing with such a high number of casualties," he said. The Ahmedabad-London Air India flight crashed on Thursday afternoon, killing 241 people on board. A part of the plane crashed into the hostel building of the BJ Medical College. The total deaths so far are 274. The black box has been recovered from the plane and will help ascertain the cause of the crashed.