Latest news with #flight171


Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Shock moment passenger threatens to CRASH Air India plane mid-flight in furious row just days after Ahmedabad disaster
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THIS is the shocking moment a woman allegedly threatened to crash a plane in India during a row with cabin staff. The incident comes just days after the tragic Ahmedabad disaster, in which at least 270 people sadly died. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 A major ruckus occurred on board an Air India Express flight Credit: X 5 A woman can be seen yelling at passengers and crew on board the flight Credit: X 5 The plane had been due to take off at around 2.30 pm Credit: X In a now viral clip, a woman can be seen yelling at passengers and crew on board the flight. The row is reported to have taken place on an Air India Express flight from Bengaluru to Surat. A woman, identified as Dr Vyas Hiral Mohanbhai, 36, was taken off the flight and detained by police following the incident on Tuesday, the Indian Express has reported. She reportedly left her bag in the front row of the plane before making her way to her seat 20 F. The plane had been due to take off at around 2.30 pm. But when cabin crew objected to where she had placed her bag and asked her to stow it in her overhead locker, she refused, according to NDTV. She is said to have instead insisted that cabin crew move her bag to her seat for her. But despite requests from the crew and an intervention from the captain, she still declined to comply - leading to the chaotic row. She also shouted at passengers who attempted to reason with her. The situation then escalated further when she allegedly yelled threats about crashing the plane, local media has reported. New video of doomed Air India flight 'shows Boeing 787 did lose power' just before crash This prompted the crew to alert security, who removed her from the flight. She was subsequently booked by Bengaluru International Airport Limited police. A dramatic video of the alleged incident has circulated online, which shows a woman shouting at crew and fellow passengers - despite their best efforts to pacify her. The cabin crew can be seen trying in vain to calm her down, while some passengers also attempt to intervene. At one point, the woman can even be seen appearing to strike another passenger. It took place on a flight operated by Air India Express, which is a subsidiary of Air India. The incident comes days after the horrifying crash of Air India flight 171 in Ahmedabad last week. All passengers and crew - except for one miracle survivor - died in the crash, which killed at least 270 people. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner had been en route to London Gatwick, but crashed less than a minute after take-off. India's Ministry of Civil Aviation said the tragic incident remains under investigation and that more information will be provided in due course. 5 She is said to have instead insisted that cabin crew move her bag to her seat for her Credit: X


India Today
11 hours ago
- Business
- India Today
Disaster after disaster: Who is accountable?
It was meant to be a week when the Narendra Modi-led NDA government would celebrate its 11th year in power with the signature 'band, baaja, baraat' media hype that has been its forte. And yet, for once, even the astute headline management skills of the government's cheerleaders couldn't detract from the awfulness of the breaking news in the second week of June: at least 270 people died in the worst civil aviation disaster in this country since two planes collided mid-air in 1996. That the Air India flight 171 crashed just outside Ahmedabad in Gujarat, the home state of the government's Big Two, perhaps makes the tragedy even more poignant. Far from celebrating a political party milestone, the nation was united in it is premature to speculate over the causes of the crash – various aviation 'experts' in TV studios have proffered different theories – the crash has triggered a renewed debate over air safety. While official data suggests India's safety track record is at par with global standards, there are enough reasons for concern. A Tata Group-run Air India management still coming to terms with the fact that running a legacy airline is not quite the same as managing a steel or any other consumer business; Boeing, the world's largest aerospace company that finds itself under scrutiny once again; the Ministry of Civil Aviation (MOCA) whose supervisory and regulatory powers over a rapidly expanding sector will come under the scanner; the Adani group which manages and operates the Ahmedabad airport will also have to provide to give context. A parliamentary standing committee report on MOCA in March this year pointed out that the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) was operating with 53% of its sanctioned posts vacant, while the Bureau of Civil Aviation Security has a vacancy rate of 35%. The government's ambitious UDAN scheme aims to connect 120 new destinations, but its budget has been slashed by 32%. While the number of airports has nearly doubled in the last decade, the amount being spent on maintaining safety standards lags behind. Which raises a big question: will a horrific air crash change anything on the ground? The black box and flight data recorder may provide more clues as to what happened for a Dreamliner plane to explode into a fireball just seconds after take-off but will the inquiry be fair and transparent in revealing the truth given the mighty stakeholders involved? Which brings one to ask a critical question: is there any ACCOUNTABILITY in our system to ensure responsibility is fixed on key figures in a time-bound manner? Just look at the series of events in a disastrous month of June that still has some days to June 4, just a day after the IPL final, a stampede in Bengaluru during the victory celebrations of the Royal Challengers Bengaluru left 11 people dead, many more injured. The rushed event was organised despite the fact that the police had not given the required permission. With back-to-back events being organised at the Vidhan Soudha and Chinnaswamy Stadium, the police was overwhelmed by the surging crowds. A public spectacle for a privately-run franchise's triumph was given priority over the urgent need for public safety. Instead of accepting responsibility, the faction-ridden Congress government in Karnataka has busily disowned its culpability. Bengaluru's top cop has been suspended while no politician who happily posed with the star players has been held to June 9, four people died and nine were injured in a rail accident in Mumbra near Mumbai. The commuters fell onto the tracks while they were standing on the footboards of overcrowded trains. People hanging by the door in peak hour crowding is not new with a sharp curve along the Mumbra track making it even more hazardous. While a Central Railway committee is probing the incident, the underlying causes of a shambolic public transport system in a megapolis like Mumbai remain unaddressed. Is the creaking suburban train system suffering from neglect as alleged by commuter organisations while the private car traffic whizzes by on a shining coastal road?advertisementOn June 16, a bridge collapsed near Pune due to overcrowding amidst heavy rainfall, leaving four people dead and several more injured. The 30-year-old bridge was deemed 'unsafe' but, despite red flags being raised by locals for several years, a work order for the construction of a new bridge was delayed and reportedly issued only five days before the collapse. Approval of Rs 8 crore for a new bridge was given last year, but bureaucratic red-tapism meant that it was all too late to avoid a tragedy. Yet again, Maharashtra's BJP-led ruling alliance politicians have fulminated and promised action, only presumably until the next bridge collapse serves as another wake-up June 15, seven people died when a chopper flying from Kedarnath temple to Guptkashi in Uttarakhand crashed in the forest. Worryingly, this was the fifth such incident in just six weeks in the area, raising questions over the feasibility of helicopter services in inclement weather in the mountains. Chief Minister Pushkar Dhami has promised to put in place a Standard Operating Procedure while the DGCA has assured extra surveillance. Once again, a case of too little, too the chronology of each such tragedy follows a familiar pattern. Little attention is paid to adhering to strict safety norms in a characteristic 'chalta hai' attitude. Rather than focus on the rigors of daily governance, priority is given to the optics of political grandstanding. More fast trains are flagged, more airports are commissioned, more tourist sites are created, more glitzy sports celebrations are a Viksit Bharat by 2047, as envisaged by the Modi government, is a noble aim. Yet, the grim reality on the ground often doesn't match the dreams being spun in the air in a nation of 1.4 billion people. And then, when every now and then, a rickety bridge collapses, a stampede is caused by mass hysteria or there is a rail or air accident, those in positions of power are the first to shrug off their responsibility. After all, in almost all instances, it is the faceless, anonymous Indian who pays with their lives. Unless there is a fundamental change in approach that places a premium on accountability above all else, we will simply lurch from one disaster to the next. Because in India, if there is one sport that we deserve an Olympic medal in, it is 'passing the buck'.advertisementPost-script: Ironically, just a few days ago, a BBC investigative report exposed the truth of the Mahakumbh stampede deaths in January this year. Officially, the UP government claimed 37 people died, but the detailed BBC investigation found the number was at least 82. If we lie about death, what price is there for human lives?(Rajdeep Sardesai is a senior journalist and author. His latest book is 2024: The Election That Surprised India)(Views expressed in this opinion piece are those of the author)Tune InMust Watch


Daily Mail
a day ago
- General
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Boeing whistleblower reveals investigators of Air India crash ALREADY know what caused it but won't reveal findings for months... leaving millions of flyers at risk
When Air India flight 171 to London crashed and exploded into flames moments after take-off from the West Indian city of Ahmedabad, the world watched in horror. All but one of the 242 passengers on board died when the aircraft plummeted into a residential area Thursday June 12. At least eight people in the area where it came down were also killed.


AFP
a day ago
- AFP
Old flight footage misrepresented as Air India disaster
"From Air India crash, just before the take off," reads Burmese-language sticker text on a Facebook video uploaded June 13, 2025. The video shows passengers using makeshift fans as a man "This is an Air India flight to Patna. Today is the 18th and the flight is at 4 o'clock. We have been on the flight for an hour, without AC. You can see how much we are sweating." Image Screenshot of the false Facebook post taken June 17, 2025 Air India flight 171 crashed into a building used by medical staff shortly after takeoff on June 12, killing at least 279 (archived link). One sole survivor miraculously survived the fiery crash, which left the tailpiece of the aircraft jutting out of the second floor of a hostel for medical staff from a nearby hospital (archived link). The inflight voice and data recorders been recovered as investigators work to determine what caused the tragic disaster (archived link). The video spread alongside similar claims on Facebook in English and Burmese, as well as on TikTok. However, the video predates the Ahmedabad crash by almost a . A reverse image search on Google using the video's keyframes found an identical clip published May 18 on the Facebook account of Rishi Mishra (archived link). Parts of the post's caption reads: "Coming to Patna from Delhi by 4 o'clock flight of Air India. The plane has been parked for an hour but the AC hasn't been operated despite being so much passenger on the plane." Image Screenshot comparison of the false Facebook post (L) and the video posted by Rishi Mishra , a former legislative member , confirmed with AFP that he filmed the video during a flight from Delhi to Patna on May 18. "Passengers were kept stranded for more than three hours as the air conditioner was not working inside the plane," he said June 16. Mihsra added that they "reached the destination around 10:30-11:00 in the evening." Air India flight 2521 was scheduled to depart from Delhi to Patna at 4 pm on May 18. But after hours of unsolved operational issues, passengers were transferred to a different aircraft (archived links here and here). video was filmed on an Airbus A320neo aircraft -- which has a smaller passenger cabin than the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner that crashed June 12 (archived links here and here). AFP has previously debunked other misinformation related to the Air India crash here and here.


Time of India
2 days ago
- Time of India
Air India Crash: Last rites of cabin crew Roshni Songhare performed in Dombivli
NEW DELHI: The last rites of 26-year-old cabin crew Roshni Songhare, who tragically lost her life in Air India flight 171 crash in Ahmedabad, began on Friday in her hometown of Dombivli. Her body was taken to the crematorium for the last rites, where hundreds of of people came to the crematorium to attend the final rites. Roshni had only recently begun flying international routes with Air India, fulfilling a dream she had nurtured since childhood. Just two years ago, she had moved from a cramped 100-square-foot rented room in Mumbai's Malabar Hill to a slightly larger apartment in Dombivli's Rajaji Path with her parents and two brothers. Her father, Rajendra, worked as a technician, and despite the family's limited means, Roshni's relatives rallied around her—supporting her education and paying for her training to become a flight attendant. She first landed a job with SpiceJet, working on domestic flights, before joining Air India, which gave her the opportunity to fly overseas. She was set to get engaged in November to a man from Thane, but the tragedy has left those dreams in ruins. Beyond her aviation career, Roshni was also a rising social media influencer, with over 67,000 followers on Instagram.