
NTSB will lead US team traveling to India to help crash probe
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INDIA ASIA AVIATION
The National Transportation Safety Board said on Thursday it will lead a team of U.S. investigators traveling to India to help in the investigation of the crash of an Air India Boeing 787 bound for London with 242 people aboard.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Katharine Jackson)

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Arabian Post
3 hours ago
- Arabian Post
Deepening Probe into Ahmedabad Boeing Disaster
Arabian Post Staff -Dubai Ahmedabad authorities have recovered both black boxes from the wreckage of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner that crashed shortly after departure en route to London Gatwick, killing 241 of the 242 people aboard and dozens on the ground. Emphasis now is on analysing flight data and cockpit voice recordings to establish whether engine thrust, control surfaces or pilot actions led to the fatal descent. India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau is spearheading the probe, with support from UK, US and Boeing specialists. Rescue and forensic teams continued sifting through the charred remains of buildings and aircraft debris in Ahmedabad's densely populated medical college area. They are gathering fragments of flaps, landing gear, engines and fuel systems to reconstruct the sequence of events. Authorities have also collected dental records and DNA samples to identify victims whose remains were severely burned. ADVERTISEMENT Preliminary scrutiny points to a sudden loss of thrust or possible flap misalignment during the initial climb. Flight-tracking data indicates the aircraft briefly ascended to about 625 feet before entering a steep descent, around 475 ft per minute, video footage shows abnormal wing-flap positioning and attempts at emergency corrective actions. India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation has issued an immediate directive for pre-departure technical checks across Air India's 787-8 and 787-9 fleet, including engine-system diagnostics, cabin-air compressors, hydraulics and fuel-pressure systems. These measures are mandatory before the affected aircraft can resume service. GE Aerospace has pledged full cooperation with the inspections, while Boeing and US aviation regulators have dispatched technical teams to support the investigation. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, shortly after arriving at the site, described the event as 'heartbreaking beyond words' and met with the lone survivor, British national Viswashkumar Ramesh, who recalled escaping the fuselage through an exit door and was treated for minor injuries. The survivor's account provides a rare eyewitness perspective amid the apex of data analysis in the coming days. Air India's reputation and 'world-class airline' ambitions under Tata Group ownership are under intense international scrutiny. Experts warn the incident—Air India's first fatal accident in decades and the first crash of a 787 Dreamliner—could severely undermine trust in the carrier's safety oversight. The regulator's maintenance order seeks to allay those concerns, but aviation analysts emphasise that rebuilding credibility will require transparent investigation and disciplined operational safeguards. Families of victims remain in anguish, many having to wait for dental and DNA verification to identify the deceased. Hospital staff and forensic teams are painstakingly processing remains amidst anxious relatives at Ahmedabad Civil Hospital. Emotional distress is intensifying calls for accountability and answers as grieving relatives await official findings. Experts caution aviation investigations can span several months, often involving layered analysis of mechanical faults, human errors, manufacturing quality and maintenance procedures. The cooperation of international agencies—including UK's Air Accidents Investigation Branch, the US NTSB and FAA—forms the backbone of a thorough inquiry, especially given multiple jurisdictions involved. Next steps hinge on decoding the black boxes, which are being analysed at a specialised laboratory in New Delhi. A clearer picture is expected to emerge once flight parameters, cockpit communications and mechanical readings are correlated with crash-site reconstructions. The urgency around maintenance audits and global oversight has intensified as aviation authorities aim to prevent similar tragedies. Meanwhile, the carrier's elderly 787 fleet—many delivered in 2014–15—remain grounded pending conclusive safety checks.


Khaleej Times
4 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Air India crash: Plane engine, flaps focus of probe
The investigation into the Air India plane crash that killed more than 240 people is focusing on the engine, flaps and landing gear, a source said on Friday, as the aviation regulator ordered safety checks on the airline's entire Boeing-787 fleet. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner with 242 people on board bound for Gatwick Airport south of London began losing height moments after take-off over a residential area of the western city of Ahmedabad and erupted in a huge fireball as it hit buildings below, CCTV footage showed. Only one passenger survived and local media reported that as many as 24 people on the ground were also killed as the plane crashed onto a medical college hostel during the lunch hour. Reuters could not immediately verify the number. It was the world's worst aviation disaster in a decade. On Friday, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters that Air India and the Indian government were looking at several aspects of the crash including issues linked to its engine thrust, flaps, and why the landing gear remained open as the plane took off and then came down within moments. The probe is also looking at whether Air India was at fault, including on maintenance issues, the source said. A possible bird-hit is not among the key areas of focus, the source said, adding that teams of anti-terrorism experts were part of the investigation process. The government is considering whether it should ground the Boeing-787 fleet in the country during the probe, the source said. There was no immediate response to requests for comment on that from Air India, Boeing and the aviation ministry. Air India has more than 30 Dreamliners that include the Boeing 787-8 and 787-9 versions. A source in Air India said there had been no communication so far from the government on the possible grounding. Separately, India's aviation regulator ordered Air India to conduct additional maintenance actions on its Boeing 787-8/9 aircraft equipped with GEnx engines, including "one-time check" of the take-off parameters before the departure of every flight from midnight of June 15. The airline has also been instructed to introduce 'flight control inspection' - checks to ensure control systems are working properly - in transit inspection, and to conduct power assurance checks, meant to verify the engine's ability to produce the required power, within two weeks. One black box found The aviation ministry said that investigators and rescue workers had recovered the digital flight data recorder - one of the two black boxes on the plane - from the rooftop of the building on which the jet crashed. There was no information on the cockpit voice recorder, the other black box, which is also crucial to the crash probe. Indian conglomerate Tata Group took control of the formerly state-owned Air India in 2022, and merged it with Vistara - a joint venture between the group and Singapore Airlines – last year. Investigators from India, the U.K. and the U.S. have arrived to probe the crash and Tata will be fully transparent about the findings, Tata Chairman Natarajan Chandrasekaran said in an internal memo seen by Reuters. Chandrasekaran said Tata wants to understand what happened, adding, "We don't know right now". Aircraft engine maker GE Aerospace said it supports the action being taken by India's aviation regulator for enhanced safety inspections of Air India's 787 fleet. "Safety is our top priority," a GE Aerospace spokesperson said. "We are committed to providing all technical support necessary to understand the cause of this accident." Earlier on Friday, rescue workers had finished combing the crash site and were searching for missing people and bodies in the buildings as well as for aircraft parts that could help explain why the plane crashed soon after taking off. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was briefed by officials on the progress of rescue operations when he visited the crash site in his home state of Gujarat on Friday. Modi also met some of the injured being treated in hospital. "The scene of devastation is saddening," he said in a post on X. Thursday's crash was the first for the Dreamliner since the wide-body jet began flying commercially in 2011, according to the Aviation Safety Network database. The plane that crashed on Thursday flew for the first time in 2013 and was delivered to Air India in January 2014, Flightradar24 said. The passengers included 169 Indian nationals, 53 Britons, seven Portuguese and one Canadian.


Filipino Times
5 hours ago
- Filipino Times
Doctor bringing family to UK killed with wife and kids in Air India crash
A UK-based Indian doctor and his entire family were among the victims of the Air India plane crash that killed over 240 people in India on Thursday. Dr. Prateek Joshi, a radiologist at Royal Derby Hospital, died along with his wife, Dr. Komi Vyas, and their three young children—twin five-year-old sons Nakul and Pradyut, and eight-year-old daughter Miraya. According to The Telegraph , the family took a selfie moments before the crash, showing them smiling and excited to begin a new life in the UK. Dr. Joshi had flown to India just two days earlier to reunite with his family, who were about to move to Britain after a period apart. In the photo taken aboard the plane, Dr. Joshi is seen smiling beside his wife of 10 years, who had recently resigned from her position in Udaipur. Their three children, seated nearby, are also beaming with joy in what would become a heartbreaking final image. Flight AI171 from Ahmedabad to London Gatwick crashed 30 seconds after take-off from Ahmedabad airport. India's aviation regulator said the aircraft issued a mayday call—a distress signal—before it crashed into the Meghani Nagar residential area. No further communication was received from the aircraft. The crash killed 242 people, including 169 Indian nationals and 53 Britons. The family's story has gone viral across social media, as people around the world express their grief over the tragedy.