Search groups scour Air India airplane crash website as demise toll rises to 270, kin press for solutions


Search and recovery teams continued scouring the site of one of India’s worst aviation disasters for a third day after the Air India flight fell from the sky and killed at least 270 people in Gujarat state, officials said Saturday.

The London-bound Boeing 787 struck a medical college hostel in a residential area of the northwestern city of Ahmedabad minutes after takeoff Thursday, killing 241 people on board and at least 29 on the ground. One passenger survived.

Recovery teams working until late Friday found at least 25 more bodies in the debris, officials said.

Dr. Dhaval Gameti at the Civil Hospital in Ahmedabad said the facility had received 270 bodies, adding the lone surviving passenger was still under observation for some of his wounds.

WATCH | How a man ended up being the lone survivor of Air India crash:

Sole survivor walks away after fiery Air India crash kills hundreds

A fiery plane crash in western India has left a single surviving passenger, a British national, who reportedly walked from the site to an ambulance. The London-bound Air India Boeing 787 went down just after takeoff with 242 people aboard, including at least one Canadian.

“He is doing very well and will be ready to be discharged anytime soon,” Gameti said Saturday.

Hundreds of relatives of the crash victims have provided DNA samples at the hospital. Most bodies were charred or otherwise unrecognizable.

‘Where are my children?’

Some relatives have expressed frustration that the process is taking too long. Authorities say it normally takes up to 72 hours to complete DNA matching and they are expediting the process.

woman crying
A relative of a passenger killed in Thursday’s Air India plane crash is comforted as she breaks down at a hospital in Ahmedabad on Saturday. (Rafiq Maqbool/The Associated Press)

“Where are my children? Did you recover them?” asked Rafiq Abdullah, whose nephew, daughter-in-law and two grandchildren were on the flight. “I will have to ask questions. Government is not answering these questions.”

Another relative persistently asked hospital staff when his relative’s body would be handed over to the family for last rites.

“Give us the body,” the relative insisted.

Among those on the flight was a Canadian citizen, Mississauga, Ont., dentist Dr. Nirali Sureshkumar Patel, her husband has confirmed.

Alongside the formal investigation, the Indian government says it has formed a high-level, multi-disciplinary committee to examine the causes leading to the crash.

The committee will focus on formulating procedures to prevent and handle aircraft emergencies in the future and “will not be a substitute to other inquiries being conducted by relevant organizations,” the Ministry of Civil Aviation said in a statement.

Investigators on Friday recovered the plane’s digital flight data recorder, or the black box, which was recovered from a rooftop near the crash site and likely will lead to clues about the cause of the accident.

Scouring crash site
Police stand guard on Saturday next to a building damaged in the Air India plane crash. The London-bound Boeing 787 struck a medical college hostel in a residential area of the city in northwestern India minutes after takeoff. (Rafiq Maqbool/The Associated Press)

India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau said it had started working with “full force” to extract the data.

The device is expected to reveal information about the engine and control settings, while the voice recorder will provide cockpit conversations, said Paul Fromme, a mechanical engineer with the U.K.-based Institution of Mechanical Engineers.

Data recorder key to getting quick answers

Aviation safety consultant Jeff Guzzetti, a former crash investigator for both the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Aviation Administration, said investigators should be able to answer some important questions about what caused the crash as soon as next week, as long as the flight data recorder is in good shape.

Investigators likely are looking at whether wing flaps were set correctly, the engine lost power, alarms were going off inside the cockpit and if the plane’s crew correctly logged information about the hot temperature outside and the weight of the fuel and passengers, Guzzetti said.

Mistakes in the data could result in the wing flaps being set incorrectly, he said.

Thursday’s crash involved a 12-year-old Boeing 787. Boeing planes have been plagued by safety issues on other types
of aircraft.

There are currently around 1,200 of the 787 Dreamliner aircraft worldwide, and this was the first deadly crash in 16 years of operation, according to experts.



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