Air India
disaster: rescue teams with sniffer dogs comb site of deadly plane crash
Narendra
Modi visits Ahmedabad crash site where at least 265 people died, with one
passenger on Boeing jet surviving
Hannah
Ellis-Petersen in Ahmedabad and agencies
Fri 13 Jun
2025 08.05 BST
Rescue teams
with sniffer dogs were combing the crash site of a London-bound passenger jet
that ploughed into a residential area of Ahmedabad in India, killing at least
265 people onboard and on the ground.
One man on
the Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner – carrying 242 passengers and crew –
survived Thursday’s crash, which left the tailpiece of the aircraft jutting out
of the second floor of a hostel for medical staff from a nearby hospital.
The nose and
front wheel landed on a canteen building where students were having lunch,
witnesses said.
The deputy
commissioner of police Kanan Desai said that 265 bodies had so far been
counted, including people who died on the ground, but the toll may rise as more
body parts are recovered.
Ambulances
containing empty wooden coffins for the bodies have been arriving at the
hospital.
“The
official number of deceased will be declared only after DNA testing is
completed,” the home minister, Amit Shah, said in a statement late on Thursday,
adding that “families whose relatives are abroad have already been informed,
and their DNA samples will be taken”.
The 242
people onboard included two pilots and 10 cabin crew. The passengers included
217 adults and 13 children, including two infants, according to Reuters. Of the
passengers, 169 were Indian nationals, 53 were Britons, seven Portuguese and
one Canadian, Air India said.
One of two
black boxes had been found, the Hindustan Times reported.
The prime
minister, Narendra Modi, who on Friday visited the neighbourhood where Air
India flight 171 went down, described the crash as “heartbreaking beyond
words”.
The airline
said the sole survivor from the plane – Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, a British
national of Indian origin – was being treated in hospital.
Footage
filmed shortly after the crash showed Ramesh bloodied and limping as he walked
to an ambulance. Police said he had been sitting in an emergency exit row and
had managed to jump out.
“He said: ‘I
have no idea how I exited the plane,’” his brother Nayan Kumar Ramesh, 27, told
PA Media in Leicester in the UK.
In
Ahmedabad, relatives of passengers gathered on Friday at an emergency centre to
give DNA samples so their loved ones could be identified.
Ashfaque
Nanabawa, 40, said he had come to find his cousin Akeel Nanabawa, who had been
onboard with his wife and three-year-old daughter. They had spoken as his
cousin sat in the plane, just before takeoff. “He called us and he said: ‘I am
in the plane and I have boarded safely and everything was OK.’ That was his
last call.”
The plane
crashed less than a minute after takeoff on Thursday afternoon after flying to
an altitude of barely 100 metres. It issued a mayday call and “crashed
immediately after takeoff”, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation said.
Ahmedabad,
the main city in Gujarat state, is home to about 8 million people and its busy
airport is surrounded by densely packed residential areas.
“One half of
the plane crashed into the residential building where doctors lived with their
families,” said Krishna, a doctor who did not give his full name.
Boeing said
it was in touch with Air India and stood “ready to support them” over the
incident, which, according to the Aviation Safety Network database, was the
first crash for a Boeing 787. The UK and US air accident investigation agencies
announced they were sending teams to support their Indian counterparts.
Tata Group,
the parent company of Air India, said it would provide 10m rupees (£86,000) to
the families of those killed in the crash. The company said it would also cover
the medical costs of those injured and provide support in the “building up” of
the medical college hit by the plane.
India has
endured several fatal air crashes, including in 1996 when two jets collided
mid-air over Delhi, killing nearly 350 people. In 2010, an Air India Express
jet crashed and burst into flames at Mangalore airport in south-west India,
killing 158 of the 166 passengers and crew onboard.
Experts said
it was too early to speculate as to what may have caused Thursday’s crash. “It
is very unlikely that the plane was overweight or carrying too much fuel,” said
Jason Knight, a senior lecturer in fluid mechanics at the University of
Portsmouth. “The aircraft is designed to be able to fly on one engine, so the
most likely cause of the crash is a double engine failure. The most likely
cause of a double engine failure is a bird strike.”
The UK
Foreign Office said officials were working with Indian authorities to establish
the facts around the crash and provide support to those involved. Gatwick
airport officials said a reception centre was being set up for relatives of the
passengers.
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