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Air India crash still shrouded in mystery six months on

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The back of Air India flight 171 is pictured at the site after it crashed in a residential area near the airport in Ahmedabad on June 12, 2025. (AFP)

The back of Air India flight 171 is pictured at the site after it crashed in a residential area near the airport in Ahmedabad on June 12, 2025. (AFP)

AHMEDABAD:  An Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner crashed in June, killing 260 people. Six months on, investigators have yet to provide clear answers, fueling disputes between pilots, the airline, and the manufacturer.


As required by international law, India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) published a preliminary report one month after the June 12 disaster, when the plane exploded into flames shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad in western India.


That report provided some technical information, but the investigation is still ongoing.


The crash 

Air India flight 171 took off at 1:38 p.m. from Ahmedabad airport with 230 passengers and 12 crew members on board, bound for London Gatwick Airport.


Less than a minute later, it crashed into the buildings of a medical university campus, located a few hundred meters (yards) from the runway.


Video footage shows it taking off but failing to gain altitude before crashing in a fireball.


The crash killed 241 of the 242 people on board and 19 on the ground.


Only one passenger survived but was seriously injured.


Among the dead were 200 Indians, 52 British nationals, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian.


Initial findings

The AAIB report, published on July 12, said that the fuel supply switches for both engines were switched to the "off" position almost simultaneously just after takeoff.


"In the cockpit voice recording, one of the pilots is heard asking the other why he cut off the fuel supply. The other pilot responded that he did not do so," the report states.


The aircraft then began to lose altitude.


The report also notes that an auxiliary power unit, intended to provide power to the aircraft in the event of engine failure, deployed automatically.


Less than 10 seconds later, both switches were returned to the "on" position.


Immediately afterward, "one of the two pilots" managed to transmit "Mayday, Mayday, Mayday" before the plane crashed.


The 15-page document does not mention whether the fuel switches were turned off by a pilot maneuver or due to a malfunction.


Controversy 

As soon as it was published, the report met strong criticism.


Pilot associations argue that the dialogue between the captain and his co-pilot, which the report merely paraphrases, suggests the possibility of human error without providing evidence.


They also pointed out that the AAIB did not recommend at that stage any control measures on the aircraft or its engines — effectively ruling out the possibility of a technical failure or a maintenance or servicing defect.


A war of words erupted between the families of the victims, lawyers and pilots on one side, and the airline and the manufacturer on the other.


The father of one of the pilots took the case to the Supreme Court.


Pushkaraj Sabharwal, 91, father of pilot Sumeet Sabharwal, said the preliminary investigation was "profoundly flawed."


In his petition, seen by AFP, he argued that it appeared to "predominantly focus on the deceased pilots, who are no longer able to defend themselves, while failing to examine or eliminate other more plausible technical and procedural causes of the crash."


Hypotheses 

British lawyer Sarah Stewart, who represents around 50 families of victims, also favors a scenario not involving the pilots.


"The factual information raises a troubling specter that this accident may have been caused by uncommanded fuel cutoff, suggesting a possible failure in the Boeing systems," she said in a statement.


Air India CEO Campbell Wilson, in a speech on Sept. 10, said that the "preliminary report indicates nothing wrong with the aircraft, nothing wrong with the engines, nothing wrong with the airline's operation."


Some experts, however, seem to doubt this.


"There were electrical faults reported before the crash on this plane," former commercial pilot Amit Singh, founder of Safety Matters Foundation, told AFP.


"The narrative of the report is built in such a way that the reader tends to believe that the pilots are responsible," even though "a lot of the data presented is not sourced," he said.


The final report "could be manipulated," he warned.


Aviation expert Mark Martin goes even further, calling it a "cleverly designed cover-up."


"Boeing did exactly the same after the 737 MAX crashes — they blamed the pilots," he said of the accidents in 2018 and 2019, noting that an investigation later found a design flaw.


"Boeing cannot afford to take the blame for the crash," said Martin.


Contacted by AFP, the US aircraft manufacturer declined to comment.