
Verified video show how Air India plane come down moments before e crash
One video wey show di moment one London-bound Air India flight crash for India now don dey verified.
BBC Verify don geolocate Air India flight AI171 go di location for Ahmedabad wey dey consistent wit di path di flight follow between di runway and di crash site.
Di way di aircraft appear for di footage dey consistent wit di Air India plane.
More on dis tori dey here.
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BBC News
12 hours ago
- BBC News
St Ives Tiger Moth pilot's memory wish takes off at 80
An 80-year-old former Tiger Moth pilot said returning to his workplace "brought back so many happy memories".Doug Collyer, who lives at Field Lodge care home in St Ives, Cambridgeshire, was granted a special wish to revisit Old Warden Aerodrome near Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, so he could reminisce about his flying days. He said it was an "emotional" trip down memory lane to the place where he used to train "felt like coming home", he said. Mr Collyer, a former flying instructor, enjoyed sharing stories with colleagues from his flying days and explored an early 20th-Century aircraft, part of the Shuttleworth Collection at the airfield. "Visiting Old Warden again felt like coming home," he said."It brought back so many happy memories. "It was also an emotional day for me, reminiscing about the good times and reconnecting with friends."He started his training in 1965 and gained his private pilot licence in 1966. In 1986 he qualified as a flying instructor and became part of the Cambridge Flying Group, which is based at the Bedfordshire airfield, until his final flight in February 2020. Mr Collyer said he trained "countless" students over the years, including close friend David, who joined him on the Martinez, manager at the Care UK home, said: "It was wonderful to see the joy on his face as he reunited with friends and shared stories from his remarkable flying career." Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Indian astrologer 'who forecast Air India plane crash' posts new message after Brazil hot-air balloon tragedy
An Indian astrologer who claims to have predicted the Air India plane crash has now spoken about the Brazilian hot-air balloon tragedy that killed eight on Saturday. The astrologer, who goes by the name Astro Sharmistha on social media, tweeted earlier this year that 'air accidents will be more in numbers' until June. Following the devastating hot-air balloon accident today, which saw the vessel catch fire mid-air, the internet astrologer wrote in a cryptic tweet: '2025 will be labelled as the year [of] air mishaps in the history of aviation. 8 were dead today in [a] hot-air balloon accident in Brazil. Praying for the safety of mankind.' In a separate tweet, she wrote: 'Saying all [of this] since long but no one cared to hear it'. Her social media posts today sparked dozens of reactions from her followers. One concerned follower asked in the comments: 'Have to travel abroad abroad between 7th and 12th October. Should I travel?'. 'Very tragic. Prayers for the departed souls and safety for all', another user commented. 'May God give strength to the families and protect everyone', a third wrote. The astrologer's prediction comes after a hot-air balloon caught fire and tumbled from the sky on Saturday in Brazil 's southern state of Santa Catarina. Footage shared by local news outlet G1 showed billows of smoke coming from the balloon in flames as it hurtled toward the ground in the municipality of Praia Grande. On a video on social media, two people can be seen falling through the air as the fire spread onboard the aircraft. Thirteen people survived and were taken to hospitals, Santa Catarina's military fire brigade said, adding that 21 people were on board including the pilot. 'We are in mourning. A tragedy has happened. We will see how it unfolds, what happened, why it happened. But the important thing now is for the state structure to do what it can,' Gov. Jorginho Mello said in a video on X. Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva expressed his solidarity with victims' families and said he was placing the federal government at the disposal of victims and local authorities. 'According to the pilot, who is one of the survivors, a fire started inside the basket and then he began to lower the balloon. When the balloon was very close to the ground, he ordered people to jump out of the basket,' Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper quoted Praia Grande head police officer Tiago Luiz Lemos as saying. 'Some of them didn't manage to jump. The fire increased and the balloon ended up falling,' Lemos added. Last year, the astrologer had tweeted that in 2025 'plane crash headlines may give us shock.' She reiterated her prediction last week, warning on X: 'I am still holding high the prediction of [a] plane crash and destruction in aviation in 2025.' The tweet, which she posted on June 5, went viral following last week's plane crash in the Indian city of Ahmedabad, leaving hundreds of social media users stunned. '[You] have yet again proved your accuracy...I'm just left speechless by [your] prediction for a plane crash...', one X account wrote. Another commented: 'How can your prediction be so accurate always?'. Her shocking prediction began trending on social media just hours after the Air India flight bound for London Gatwick crashed and exploded into a fireball, killing at least 270 people, including 241 passengers and crew. The Boeing was not much more than 400ft above ground when the two experienced pilots onboard apparently lost power in both engines. The astrologer's shocking prediction began trending on social media just hours after the Air India flight bound for London Gatwick crashed and exploded into a fireball They then had 17 agonising seconds to wrestle with the controls before their plane smashed into a medical college packed with doctors, sending a fireball soaring into the sky. Experts from India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau are probing the crash with assistance from the UK, the US and officials from Boeing. The Indian government has set up a separate, high-level committee to examine the causes leading to the crash and formulate procedures to prevent and handle aircraft emergencies in the future. The committee is expected to file a preliminary report within three months. Authorities have also begun inspecting and carrying out additional maintenance and checks of Air India's entire fleet of Boeing 787 Dreamliners to prevent any future incident. Air India has 33 Dreamliners in its fleet. There were 53 British nationals on board Flight AI171 when it crashed into a residential area near the airport, as well as 159 Indian nationals, seven Portuguese citizens and a Canadian.


Telegraph
a day ago
- Telegraph
British stealth fighter jet stranded in India for over a week
An £88 million Royal Navy fighter jet has been stranded at an airport in southern India for over a week after it ran into trouble in the Arabian Sea. A Royal Navy F-35B Lightning, the world's most advanced and expensive fighter jet, made an emergency landing on June 14. The fifth-generation stealth fighter, part of the HMS Prince of Wales Carrier Strike Group, was carrying out military drills with the Indian Navy earlier in the week. The Telegraph understands that the aircraft was unable to return to the carrier due to poor weather conditions. The pilot issued a distress signal at around 9pm local time last Saturday, triggering a full emergency protocol at Thiruvananthapuram airport, India media reported. Flight tracking data showed the US-designed aircraft landing safely half an hour later at the airport, which is Kerala's second busiest. According to Indian media reports, it then suffered a hydraulic failure. 'It was undertaking routine flying outside [the] Indian Air Defence Identification Zone with Thiruvananthapuram [airport] earmarked as the emergency recovery airfield,' India's air force said in a statement. A maintenance team from the HMS Prince of Wales later arrived, but was unable to repair the F-35B's issue. A larger team from the UK is expected to travel to Kerala to assist in the technical work. For now, the jet, which has sparked a wave of interest inside India, remains parked in the open at the airport under the protection of local Indian authorities, with British personnel overseeing its recovery. It is not yet known how long it will take until the aircraft is operational again, defence sources said. Images taken at the airport over the past week show the slick grey fighter jet parked in an isolated bay with a small number of armed guards stationed around it. Questions have been raised as to how secure the prized military asset is, after an image emerged of just one Indian soldier in a high-visibility jacket standing in front of the jet, holding a gun. However, the Royal Navy reportedly rejected Air India's offer to allocate hangar space to the aircraft due to concerns that other people could access and assess the advanced technologies on the jet. If the second attempt to repair the jet fails, defence sources told ANI news agency that plans are in place to transport the fighter back to its home base aboard a military cargo aircraft. The F-35 Lightning is Britain's frontline stealth fighter that forms part of the core offensive capabilities of the Royal Navy. The single-seat, single-engine supersonic jet is considered to have the advanced computer and networking capabilities of any aircraft in the sky, along with stealth capabilities designed to evade enemy radars. Built by American aerospace firm Lockheed Martin, the multi-role fighter has a top speed of 1,200mph – or 1.6 times the speed of sound. India's air force does not have any F-35s and instead operates French-made Rafales as well as squadrons of mainly Russian and former Soviet aircraft. The country is looking to expand its fighter fleet. The US is considering formally offering F35s to India, but the country is concerned about the model's steep cost, heavy maintenance and operational issues. The Royal Navy's Operation Highmast is an eight-month deployment led by the HMS Prince of Wales strike group and includes exercises with allies in the Mediterranean, Middle East, and Indo-Pacific regions. The carrier group's next planned port calls are Singapore, Japan, South Korea and Australia