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Seven people killed in India helicopter crash

Seven people killed in India helicopter crash

BBC News9 hours ago

Seven people have died in a helicopter crash in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand, officials have said.According to local media reports, the aircraft was flying from the state capital, Dehradun, to a popular pilgrimage site in the Himalayan mountains.
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‘They were inseparable': family's anguish at wait to bring Air India victims home
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  • The Guardian

‘They were inseparable': family's anguish at wait to bring Air India victims home

In the ramshackle, cramped lanes of Ambika Nagar in the Indian city of Gujarat, everyone spoke of Pooja and Harshit Patel with pride. The couple had done what none of their relatives or neighbours had managed to achieve before; they had moved abroad, settling among the thriving Gujarati diaspora community in the British city of Leicester. Their lives in Leicester, where the couple had moved so Pooja could complete her business masters degree – later getting a job at Amazon alongside Harshit – seemed unimaginably glamorous to their relatives and close-knit community back in India. Pooja would call her mother, 58-year-old Chandra Mate, at least three times a day with tales of British life and to show off her latest outfits, spinning in front of the mirror. Mate, who had never left India and had spent most of her life in this small two-bedroom house in Ahmedabad, lived for these calls. Collectively Pooja and Harshit's families, who came from humble backgrounds, had spent every penny, sold every piece of ancestral land and jewellery and pooled every resource to get their children to the UK and to pay for Pooja's degree. When the couple arrived back in India, surprising their families with the first visit in two years, they were greeted like celebrities. 'When I saw her after two years, it was a kind of joy I had never known,' said Mate, wiping away her tears. 'The entire neighbourhood came out to greet her and Harshit. Her glow, her presence – everything about her had changed.' By the time they started their journey home, it took almost an hour for them to say goodbye to everyone in the lane. Yet they never made it back to Leicester. Less than a minute after their Air India 171 flight from Ahmedabad to London lifted off from the tarmac, air traffic control received a panicked message over the radio from the plane's flight deck. 'Thrust not achieved. Falling. Falling. Mayday. Mayday.' Then the radio went dead. Within seconds, the 227-tonne Boeing dreamliner plane, which had reached 650ft, fell to the ground, exploding into a fireball. The cause of the crash remains a mystery to the authorities and aviation experts, and an investigation is under way. Now Pooja and Harshit's bodies lie in the morgue of Civil hospital Ahmedabad, alongside at least 270 others who lost their lives in the crash, including passengers on the flight and victims on the ground. For their parents, the grief of the disaster has been compounded by an ongoing, excruciating delay in getting the remains of their children back. Authorities and forensic experts have been at pains to emphasise what a complex and gargantuan task it is to correctly identify those who died in the crash, with bodies and limbs still being uncovered from the site over the weekend. Many were charred and dismembered far beyond recognition and a lengthy exercise to match relatives DNA samples to remains has had authorities working overnight for three days, with only about 47 matches made so far. By Sunday morning, Harshit and Pooja's families had a small glimmer of hope, believing that both bodies had been identified. They planned to bring them home and made reservations at the local crematorium, to burn them as per Hindu traditions. But by the afternoon, devastating news was delivered; only Harshit's remains had been confirmed by the hospital. Harshit, 33, and Pooja, 28, had been devoted to each other since they got married eight years ago. Theirs was what is known in India as a love marriage, rather than one arranged by their families, which is still seen as relatively unique. Through sobs, Harshit's father, Anil Patel, said he would not pick up one body without the other. 'In life they were inseparable,' he said. 'I cannot separate them in death. 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As Pooja had left for Leicester, she promised her mother to finally buy her a washing machine to ease her domestic burdens. Mate was filled with regret that she did not take her daughter to the airport due to the suffocating summer heat. 'If only I had gone to drop her off, I would've had a few more hours with her,' she said, breaking down again. Yet even as they waited anxiously for the bodies, Anil knew that another episode of pain likely awaited when they finally received them. Officials told the families that they would most likely receive the bodies in 'kits', rather than coffins, as they were so badly burned, dismembered and decomposed. They have been banned from opening them, and will have to cremate them under police supervision. 'We won't even be able to see their faces. Not one last time,' he said with a sob.

Vigil for Portsmouth QA Hospital nurse who died in Air India crash
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Vigil for Portsmouth QA Hospital nurse who died in Air India crash

A vigil has been held for a "kind and compassionate" nurse who died in the Air India plane crash on Gopakumaran Nair had recently resigned from her job at Portsmouth's Queen Alexandra (QA) Hospital and travelled to India to submit documents for a nursing post in Kerala, where she planned to move back to.A vigil was held for her at the Mountbatten Centre in Portsmouth, as part of a sports day event organised by the Union of UK Malayalee Associations (UUKMA) - which friends said Ms Renjitha had been hoping to Furtado, who worked with her at the QA Hospital, said she was "very kind and humble" and her death was "the biggest loss". "Once you meet Renjitha, there is no way you will forget her," she said."She was a very humble person with a smile on her face all the time." She said there were "no words" to express the loss."When we heard the news, and when we saw it's her name especially, it was heart-breaking," she said."[We] can't express what it is we're feeling." Eldhose Mathew, who ran a shop where Ms Renjitha was a regular customer, said her death was "unbelievable"."She was not just a customer - she was just like family," he said."She always came into the shop with a very good smile, and always was respectful and warm."In a eulogy read out at the event, Ms Renjitha's death was described as leaving "a deep void" in the community."[She was] a shining light in our community - a gentle soul whose warmth, kindness and humble presence touched many lives," it read."She carried with her the spirit of Kerala while building a life in the United Kingdom."[Her] life though brief, was full of meaning and love." All but one of the London-bound plane's 242 passengers and crew members died when it crashed in a residential area in Ahmedabad shortly after take-off on of the UUKMA's leaders, Edy Sebastian, said Ms Renjitha had an elderly mother, as well as a daughter aged about 12, and a son, who was about 15. You can follow BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Bridge collapse kills at least two people in India - with several others swept away in river
Bridge collapse kills at least two people in India - with several others swept away in river

Sky News

timean hour ago

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Bridge collapse kills at least two people in India - with several others swept away in river

At least two people have died and more than 30 are injured after a bridge collapsed in India, officials have said. Maharashtra's chief minister Devendra Fadnavis added that a number of people were swept away after the bridge - over the Indrayani river in the western Indian city of Pune - collapsed on Sunday. He added on social media that "some people got swept away, so a search operation is underway on a war footing to find them". The minister said six people have been rescued while 32 were injured, with six in a critical condition, and that the National Disaster Response Force had been deployed, with other agencies directed to remain on high alert. It comes four days after an Air India flight crashed less than a minute after taking off from Ahmedabad airport in northwestern India, killing at least 270 people. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, which was carrying 53 Britons, crashed into a doctors' hostel in a residential area moments after taking off. And earlier on Sunday, a helicopter carrying Hindu pilgrims crashed in a forested area several miles from the Kedarnath pilgrimage route, killing seven people on board. That accident happened within minutes of the helicopter taking off, officials said, on what should have been a 10-minute flight.

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