
Air India plane crash: PM Modi's first reaction -'Tragedy in Ahmedabad has stunned and saddened us'
Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed anguish over the devastating plane crash in Ahmedabad, where Air India Flight AI171, with 242 people on board, crashed shortly after taking off from from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport. The flight was bound for London. In a post on X, PM Modi described the incident as "heartbreaking beyond words" and extended condolences to those affected.
"The tragedy in Ahmedabad has stunned and saddened us. It is heartbreaking beyond words. In this sad hour, my thoughts are with everyone affected by it. I have been in touch with ministers and authorities who are working to assist those affected," PM Narendra Modi wrote on X.
According to a passenger list document accessed by Mint, Former Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani was reportedly among the 242 passengers who were onboard the Air India flight. Air India has confirmed that there were as many as 169 Indians, 53 British, seven Portuguese and one Canadian among the passengers.
The former Gujarat Chief Minister was reportedly travelling in the Z class, a Business Class category, though his condition remains unconfirmed as rescue efforts are still underway. Vijay Rupani served as Gujarat's Chief Minister from 2016 to 2021 — a role previously held by Narendra Modi for 12 years, from 2001 to 2014.
The Air India flight, a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner operating from Ahmedabad to London Gatwick, crashed into a residential area in Ahmedabad's Meghaninagar, just minutes after taking-off.
The incident happened around 1:30 pm, shortly after the Air India plane took off. It crashed just outside the Ahmedabad airport. While cause of the Air India plane crash is not known yet, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said in a statement that the pilot has made a 'MAYDAY' call.
'As per ATC, aircraft departed from Ahmadabad at 1339 IST (0809 UTC) from runway 23. It gave a MAYDAY Call to ATC, but thereafter no response was given by the aircraft to the calls made by ATC. Aircraft Immediately after departure from Runway 23, fell on ground outside the airport perimeter.'
The video of the plane crash shows thick black smoke billowing out of the Air India plane crash site.
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NDTV
18 minutes ago
- NDTV
Vijay Rupani Seen In Instagram Video At Airport Moments Before Air India Crash
A video filmed by two British nationals at Ahmedabad airport captured the last known visuals of former Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani, minutes before all of them were killed in a London-bound Air India plane crash on Thursday. A clip posted by London-based yoga coach Jamie Meek and his partner Fiongal Greenlaw-Meek shows them seated at the Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport and sharing their experiences during the India visit, when the senior BJP leader passes by. Dressed in a navy-blue Nehru jacket, Rupani is seen talking over the phone as he walks through the departure lounge. The video, intended as a lighthearted farewell to India, was shared by the two Britons on Instagram just before they boarded the flight. "Goodbye India," Jamie said in the video. "We are at the airport, just boarding." The 68-year-old Former Chief Minister was en route to London to visit his wife and daughter. He was seated in 2D on Air India Flight AI171, a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, which took off at 1:38 pm with 242 people on board. Moments after takeoff, the aircraft lost altitude and crashed into a residential wing of a medical college in Ahmedabad's Meghaninagar area. It plummeted into a hostel block, smashing through the dining hall and subsequently going up in flames. Eyewitnesses near the crash site reported seeing the aircraft flying unusually low. Rescue operations were swift but hampered by flames and dense smoke. Only one person survived. Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu later confirmed Mr Rupani's death. Vijay Rupani, 68, served as Gujarat's 16th Chief Minister from 2016 to 2021. Born in Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma, in 1956, he and his family migrated to India during the political unrest in Southeast Asia and settled in Rajkot. He began his political journey as a student activist and steadily rose through the ranks, becoming a municipal corporator in 1987. Over the decades, Mr Rupani held various portfolios, including transport, water supply, and labour. He resigned as Chief Minister in 2021 as part of the BJP's leadership reshuffle ahead of state polls.


Hindustan Times
25 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
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India Today
26 minutes ago
- India Today
When a Pak fighter jet shot down Gujarat CM's plane 60 years ago
It was the height of the 1965 India-Pakistan war. And 25-year-old Pakistani Flying Officer Qais Hussain, flying a Sabre jet, was patrolling the tense skies over Bhuj and eastern Sindh. On spotting a civilian aircraft, Hussain sought permission and, once granted, fired at the Beechcraft. Feeling triumphant that he had foiled an enemy surveillance operation, Hussain returned to his base in later, when All India Radio's 7 pm bulletin announced that a plane carrying Gujarat's then Chief Minister Balwantrai Mehta and seven civilians had been shot down by Pakistan, Hussain's pride gave way to shock, disbelief, and a lifelong CM Balwantrai Mehta, pilot Jahangir Engineer, and a journalist were among the eight people killed after their Beechcraft aircraft was shot down by the Pakistani fighter. Almost 60 years after Balwantrai Mehta, known as the father of Panchayati Raj, lost his life in an air tragedy, Vijay Rupani, who had served as the Gujarat CM between 2016 and 2021, died in an air crash in Ahmedabad. The Air India flight to London, carrying Rupani, crashed just minutes after taking off from Ahmedabad's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport with 242 people on board. All but one perished as the aircraft stalled mid-air and burst into flames upon hitting the a moment to revisit the 1965 tragedy that claimed Balwantrai Mehta's life, a rare and haunting instance when political leadership was quite literally lost mid-air. Balwantrai Mehta is called the father of Panchayati Raj because he led the 1957 committee that recommended democratic decentralisation through a three-tier system of local self-governance, laying the foundation for grassroots democracy in India. (Image: India Post) GUJARAT CM'S FLIGHT INTO THE FOG OF 1965 WARThe 1965 India-Pakistan war, which began in August, had reached a critical point by the UN Security Council on September 22 passed a resolution calling for an unconditional ceasefire, India accepted it immediately. Pakistan, however, delayed its response, finally agreeing to it a day later, on September as international pressure mounted to restore peace, the skies over the subcontinent remained same afternoon, Gujarat CM Balwantrai Mehta was on his way to Mithapur, near the Gulf of Kutch, accompanied by his wife Sarojben, three aides, and two eight-seater Beechcraft aircraft was piloted by Jahangir Engineer, the state government's chief pilot and a veteran of the Indian Air Force and the Royal Air Force. The group took off from Ahmedabad not knowing that they were flying into BALWANTRAI MEHTA'S PLEA IN THE SKY GOES UNHEEDEDadvertisementFlying Officer Qais Hussain of the Pakistan Air Force had taken off from the Mauripur Airbase near Karachi along with Flight Lieutenant Bukhari in US-made F-86 Sabre fighter Bukhari had to return due to fuel issues, Hussain continued towards the border after receiving a report from ground control that an unidentified aircraft was flying near Pakistan's airspace. Amid the heightened tensions of war, the unidentified aircraft was suspected to be on a reconnaissance mission, possibly signalling an Indian attempt to open a new front in the Rann of at 20,000 feet, Hussain was directed to drop to 3,000, the same level at which Mehta's Beechcraft was Hussain closed in, he spotted the Beechcraft marked with Indian insignia. Pakistani ground control instructed him to Beechcraft noticed the approaching Pakistani Sabre and began ascending, waggling its wings, a universal plea for clemency in air the Indian aircraft's distress signal, Hussain opened fire. His first burst tore through the left wing, and the second set the right engine ablaze. Moments later, the aircraft crashed near the India-Pakistan border in the Kutch region, killing all eight people on board, including CM the shooting, I had a sense of achievement and satisfaction that I had completed my mission and destroyed any recce data that might have been collected to open a new war front," Hussain later HUSSAIN LEARNS HE SHOT DOWN A CHIEF MINISTERAfter shooting down the Indian plane, Hussain sped back to the Karachi base."I landed back at Mauripur, Karachi with my fuel tanks bone dry and was greeted by my seniors and other squadron colleagues. Later that evening, All India Radio announced the names of the occupants who had lost their lives in that aircraft...," Hussain then did Hussain learn the full gravity of what had happened, that he had killed a sitting Indian Chief Minister and other civilians. It was a rare moment during an international conflict: a political leader downed in wartime airspace by military misjudgement or perhaps asked his superiors why he had been ordered to shoot down what was clearly a civilian aircraft. The explanation: the plane was dangerously close to the border, and there were fears that India might open a second front in the Rann of YEARS LATER, QAIS HUSSAIN SEEKS FORGIVENESSNearly 46 years later, in 2011, a retired Qais Hussain read an article in a Pakistani defence journal about the 1965 incident where shots fired by him killed 8 civilians, including a high-profile by the past and seeking closure, Hussain tracked down the daughter of pilot Jahangir Engineer, Farida Singh, in Mumbai and wrote her an email seeking the email, Hussain expressed sorrow for his actions but maintained that he was simply following orders in a time of war."I want to tell you that I did not pull the trigger out of malice," he wrote. "It was war. I followed the rules of engagement and carried out the command." He ended the letter with condolences to all eight families who had lost loved ones in the crash."For a moment, I wished I had returned without firing... But I was a soldier. And a soldier must follow orders," Hussain later said in an Farida Singh responded with surprising her reply, Singh admitted the loss of her father had shaped her life, but said she had never felt hatred towards the man who caused it. "I realised that in war, even good people are forced to do terrible things. We were all pawns in a larger game", she Beechcraft carrying Balwantrai Mehta was not the only one; it was one of the four civilian or non-combat aircraft which came under Pakistani fire during the 1965 War. But the loss of a sitting Chief Minister made it rarely repeats with such cruel precision, but it has now claimed Gujarat Chief Ministers twice mid-air, once in war and once in Watch