Tag: plane crash

  • 2nd black box recovered after deadly Air India plane crash

    2nd black box recovered after deadly Air India plane crash

    Search teams have recovered the cockpit voice recorder from the site of last week’s Air India crash, a key component which could shed light on the cause of the disaster.

    The cockpit voice recorder was found in the wreckage in the western city of Ahmedabad, the government said on Monday.

    The flight data recorder had been retrieved earlier.

    Investigators hope the two recorders, commonly referred to as black boxes will help them determine what went wrong on Thursday, when the London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner went down shortly after take-off and burst into flames.

    The voice recorder captures cockpit conversations, while the data recorder logs flight performance metrics.

    At least 270 people were killed both on board and on the ground, according to tallies by Indian media.

    However, authorities are yet to release an official death toll as victim identification efforts are still ongoing.

    The airline said 241 people on board were killed, with a 40-year-old British man the sole survivor.

    India’s Air Accident Investigation Board is spearheading the investigation.

    The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board is also involved, as the aircraft was manufactured in the United States.

    Earlier on Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s principal secretary, Pramod Kumar Mishra, visited Gujarat to oversee relief efforts, ensure a thorough investigation, and coordinate support for victims’ families.

  • UPDATE:  India Plane crash only survivor narrates ordeal, says ” I opened my eyes realized I was not dead

    UPDATE: India Plane crash only survivor narrates ordeal, says ” I opened my eyes realized I was not dead

    The only survivor of 242 people aboard a London-bound passenger plane that crashed in the Indian city of Ahmedabad on Friday said how even he was struggling to explain how he miraculously walked out alive from the fireball explosion.

    “Everything happened in front of me, and even I couldn’t believe how I managed to come out alive from that,” British citizen Vishwash Kumar Ramesh said from his hospital bed on Friday, speaking in Hindi to national broadcaster, DD News.

    The Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner plane, which was full of fuel as it took off for a long-haul flight to London, exploded into a burst of orange flame on Thursday afternoon just after taking off.

    Ramesh — who was in seat 11A according to media reports — was the only one aboard the plane not to be killed, with at least 24 others killed on the ground.

    His brother was also on the same flight, his family in Britain told reporters.

    “Within a minute after takeoff, suddenly… it felt like something got stuck… I realised something had happened, and then suddenly the plane’s green and white lights turned on,” Ramesh said.

    “After that, the plane seemed to speed up, heading straight towards what turned out to be a hostel of a hospital. Everything was visible in front of my eyes when the crash happened.”

    Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, paid a visit to Ramesh on Friday at the hospital where he is being treated for burns and other injuries, footage on his YouTube channel showed.

    ‘About To Die’

    Ramesh, aged 40, is from the British city of Leicester, according to Britain’s Press Association news agency, which spoke with his family at home.

    The plane smashed into the buildings just outside the perimeter of the airport.

    Rescue officials are seen near the wreckage of Air India flight 171 after it crashed in a residential area near the airport in Ahmedabad on June 12, 2025.

    “Initially, I too thought that I was about to die, but then I opened my eyes and realised that I was still alive,” he said.

    “I saw the air hostess and aunties and uncles all in front of me,” he said, his voice trailing off in emotion, using a term of respect used in India for older people.

    Rescue officials carry a victim’s body at the site where Air India flight 171 crashed in a residential area near the airport in Ahmedabad on June 12, 2025.

    “I unfastened my seatbelt and tried to escape, and I did,” he said.

    “I think the side I was on was not facing the hostel. Where I landed was closer to the ground and there was space too – and when my door broke — I saw that there was space, and I thought I could try to slip out,” he added.

    Videos shared on social media showed Ramesh soon after, dressed in a bloodied t-shirt and limping, but walking toward an ambulance.

    “My left hand got slightly burnt due to the fire, but an ambulance brought me to the hospital. The people here are taking good care of me,” he said.

    Air India said there were 169 Indian passengers, 53 British, seven Portuguese, and a Canadian on board the flight bound for London’s Gatwick airport, as well as 12 crew members.

    The death toll currently stands at 265, police said.

    Authorities have set up DNA testing for relatives of passengers and those killed on the ground to identify the scorched bodies and body parts.

    AFP

  • London-bound plane crash: 241 confirmed dead as sole survivor lands in hospital

    London-bound plane crash: 241 confirmed dead as sole survivor lands in hospital

    Air India has confirmed that, of the 242 people aboard the crashed London-bond plane, there are now 241 confirmed fatalities, and that the sole survivor is currently being treated in a hospital.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Air India flight AI171, operating from Ahmedabad to London Gatwick on 12 June 2025, was involved in a fatal accident on Thursday.

    The 12-year-old Boeing 787-8 aircraft departed from Ahmedabad at 1338 hrs, carrying 230 passengers and 12 crew.

    “The aircraft crashed shortly after take-off. We regret to inform that, of the 242 aboard, there are 241 confirmed fatalities. The sole survivor is being treated in a hospital,” the airline stated.

    It was gathered that the passengers comprised 169 Indian nationals, 53 British nationals, 7 Portuguese nationals and 1 Canadian national.

    “The survivor is a British national of Indian origin,” Air India disclosed, and he has been identified as Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, who was in seat 11A of the flight.

    Ramesh, believed his brother was on the same flight, while narrating his experience, said the aircraft crashed almost immediately after takeoff.

    “Thirty seconds after takeoff there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed. It all happened so quickly,” Ramesh told the Hindustan Times from a general ward in the civil hospital in Asarwa, Ahmedabad.

    The 40-year-old British national told the newspaper he was returning to the UK, where he has lived for 20 years, after visiting family in India.

    Another brother, speaking outside the family home in Leicester, in the East Midlands, said Ramesh had “no idea” how he escaped.

    Nayan Kumar Ramesh, 27, added: “We were just shocked as soon as we heard it. I last spoke to him yesterday morning. We’re devastated, just devastated. He said, ‘I have no idea how I exited the plane’.”

    A relative added: “He’s doing well I think. It’s a big shock. I don’t have many words to describe the incident.”

    Initial reports suggested all passengers onboard had died, but local police confirmed they had found one survivor of the flight, which plummeted into a medical college on Thursday, with videos showing a huge explosion and thick smoke in the immediate aftermath.

    The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner was engulfed in a huge fireball after crashing into the Meghani Nagar residential area minutes after taking off at 1.38pm local time (09:08 BST) on Thursday.

  • “How God saved me from plane crash -Wike narrates close to death encounter

    “How God saved me from plane crash -Wike narrates close to death encounter

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike has narrated how he narrowly escaped a plane crash during a Thanksgiving service held in a church in Port Harcourt, the capital of Rivers State.

    The details of the church Mr Wike gave the testimony at are unknown as of press time.

    According to a news magazine, the aircraft he was aboard was a Bombardier Global Express 5000/6000 series jet, estimated to be worth N15 billion.

    In a viral video, the popular politician described the incident as a near-death experience.

    While recounting the ordeal, the former governor of Rivers State said: “My wife had gone to Lagos to bring back my daughter, and she landed at the Air Force base. I thought, ‘Let me go to the base, and when they land, I’ll just board the plane and head to Lagos.’ I was joined by two of my friends, making three of us in total. Someone was already waiting for me in Lagos, whom I must see that night.

    “About fifteen minutes after we took off, all we heard was a loud ‘gboom.’ The cabin crew started running. I asked what the problem was, and one of them said, ‘Sir, there’s a problem.’ I asked again, ‘What’s the problem?’ She ran off, then came back and said, ‘One engine is gone.’ The pilot later announced that it would be safer to turn back since we were headed to Lagos, and asked if we could return to Port Harcourt.”

    Additionally, Mr Wike stated, “We looked at each other. By the grace of God, we landed safely. I hadn’t told my parents or many others that I was travelling.”

    Meanwhile, before his Thanksgiving video went viral, social media buzzed with a clip that allegedly featured him praying while the pilots made frantic efforts to stabilise the jet.

    The video, which was said to contain Mr Wike’s voice, showed the interior of an aircraft with the pilots speaking audibly in the background.

    “Satan, you are a liar! Father, Father! Oh, Jehovah. Blood of Jesus! Father, it is time to prove yourself! Jesus, you are in charge! Ohhhh Jehovah! Save my soul, save my soul, save my soul!”

    Mr Wike made headlines on Tuesday after a video surfaced showing him dancing to entertain President Bola Tinubu and other dignitaries during the commissioning of the refurbished Abuja International Conference Centre.

    He renamed the centre after Mr Tinubu and dedicated several halls to Vice President Kashim Shettima, Chief Justice of Nigeria Kudirat Kekere-Ekun, Senate President Godswill Akpabio, and Speaker of the House of Representatives Tajudeen Abbas.

  • 18 people die in plane crash

    18 people die in plane crash

    A plane with 21 people on board crashed in South Sudan on Wednesday, leaving 18 people dead, including two pilots, South Sudan Eagles Media reported.

    It added that three others are in critical condition.

    “A plane carrying 21 passengers, including the pilot, has crashed while departing from Unity Oil Field, killing 18 people and leaving three others in critical condition.

    “The pilot and co-pilot are among the dead,’’ South Sudan Eagles Media said on X.

    Among the passengers were 16 South Sudanese, two Chinese and one Indian, the Eye Radio broadcaster reported, citing multiple sources.

    Operated by the Light Air Services logistics company, the plane was reportedly transporting engineers from the Unity oilfield to the capital of Juba.

    The plane took off from the oilfield, but its wing broke off, causing it to crash 10 minutes later, an eye witness told the broadcaster.

  • SAD! Plane crash-lands on beach in Brazil

    SAD! Plane crash-lands on beach in Brazil

    A plane crash occurred on Thursday morning in Ubatuba, a coastal city in the southeastern state of São Paulo, Brazil.

    A Cessna 545 aircraft, carrying five people, including the pilot, crashed and exploded on a nearby beach after overshooting the rainy runway at Ubatuba Airport.

    Dramatic surveillance footage captured the moment the plane attempted to land, only to veer off course and slam through a fence before coming to rest in the ocean.

    Bystanders rushed to the scene, recording first responders as they rescued two children from the wreckage and carried them to safety.

    Tragically, the pilot, identified as Paulo Seghetto, suffered a cardiac arrest and died at the scene. Four passengers, including two children, survived the ordeal, with some sustaining injuries.

    According to eyewitnesses, a woman and her child, who were on the beach, were hit by the plane but miraculously survived. The Ubatuba city government and the São Paulo Department of Public Safety confirmed that a bystander was injured in the incident.

    The plane, owned by a family, had departed from Mineiros Municipal Airport in Goiás and encountered poor weather conditions, including a wet runway, before the fatal crash.

    The Cessna 545, built in 2008, has a capacity of seven passengers and two pilots, and requires a minimum runway length of 2,588 feet to land safely. The Ubatuba Airport’s landing strip measures 3,083 feet.

    An investigation into the cause of the crash is underway.

  • Details emerge on crashed Jeju Air flight with 181 passengers

    Details emerge on crashed Jeju Air flight with 181 passengers

    Rescuers suspect 179 people died when a plane veered off a South Korean airport runway and caught fire on Sunday, local media reported on Sunday.

    Two survivors, both of them crew members, were taken to hospital and remain conscious after the accident, according Yonhap news agency, citing officials, after the plane veered off the runway while landing and collided with a fence at Muan International Airport.

    Earlier, the country’s national fire agency said 84 women, 82 men and 11 others whose genders were not immediately identifiable died in the fire at the airport, according to PA news agency.

    An emergency meeting was convened in the presidential office in Seoul, chaired by Chief of Staff Chung Jin Suk, to discuss the coordination of ministries to provide resources such as medical assistance.

    South Korean television aired a video showing the aircraft skidding across the runway without its landing gear down, smashing at the end of the runway and bursting into flames.

    Several eyewitnesses on the ground reported seeing fire coming from one of the turbines and heard several loud bangs, Yonhap said.

    The plane was a 15-year-old Boeing 737-800 jet that was returning from Bangkok and the crash happened at 9:03 am (0003 GMT), the Transport Ministry reported, PA said.

    The pilots initially tried to land but aborted the attempt then tried a crash landing, the report said.

    Pictures taken from a distance initially showed huge dark plumes of smoke above the scene. Later photos showed burning wreckage and charred debris from the aircraft.

    “The aircraft has almost completely been destroyed, and it is difficult to identify the deceased,” a fire official said, according to Yonhap.

    “We are in the process of recovering the remains, which will take time.”

    The Jeju Air flight, with some 175 passengers and six crew members aboard, was returning from Bangkok.

    Jeju Air chief executive Kim E-Bae said the airline extended its deepest condolences and apologies to those affected.

    “Currently, the exact cause of the accident has yet to be determined, and we must wait for the official investigation by government agencies,” Kim said in a statement.

    “Regardless of the cause, I take full responsibility as the chief executive.”

    US aircraft producer Boeing contacted Jeju Air after the accident, according to media reports.

    Authorities suspect a bird strike led to the accident, based on initial investigations.

    Muan’s control tower issued a warning to the pilots of bird strikes before the accident, according to reports.

    The pilots reportedly made an emergency call shortly afterwards.

    Acting President Choi Sang Mok visited the accident site and ordered agencies to use all available equipment, personnel and infrastructure to “save even one more life,” Yonhap reported, citing his office.

    “I believe no words of consolation will be enough for the families who have suffered such a tragedy,” Choi said.

    “The government will spare no effort in supporting the bereaved families.”

    Choi has been acting president since Friday, after lawmakers voted to impeach then-acting president Han Duck Soo, barely two weeks after Yoon Suk Yeol was removed from the presidency over his imposition of martial law.

    South Korea’s Defence Ministry said about 180 personnel, firefighting vehicles and ambulances had been deployed to the airport.

    All other flights to and from Muan have been cancelled. Yonhap reported that two of the passengers were Thai nationals.

    Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra expressed her condolences on social media platform X.

    She had asked her country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs to investigate whether there were any Thai passengers on the plane and what the current situation was, according to the post.

    Leaders worldwide sent condolences to South Korea, including European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and British Foreign Secretary David Lammy.

    Muan Airport, which opened in 2007 after 10 years of construction, is located in the south-western province of Jeolla – almost 300 kilometres from the capital Seoul.

  • CONFIRMED! 96 die in South Korea plane crash

    CONFIRMED! 96 die in South Korea plane crash

    A Jeju Air plane carrying 181 people from Bangkok to South Korea crashed on arrival Sunday, colliding with a barrier and bursting into flames, with only two survivors rescued so far and 96 confirmed dead.

    A collision with birds and adverse weather conditions were cited by the authorities as likely causes of the crash that flung passengers out of the plane and left it “almost completely destroyed”, according to fire officials.

    Video showed the Jeju Air plane landing on its belly without wheels at Muan International Airport, skidding off the runway as smoke streamed out from the engines, before crashing into a wall and exploding in flames.

    “Passengers were ejected from the aircraft after it collided with the barrier, leaving little chance of survival,” a local fire official told families at a briefing, according to a statement released by the fire brigade.

    “The plane is almost completely destroyed, and identifying the deceased is proving difficult. The process is taking time as we locate and recover the remains,” he was quoted as saying.

    “So far, two people rescued — both are flight attendants — 96 dead,” the fire department said, revising an earlier statement that said one of the survivors was a passenger.

    A photo showed the tail section of the plane — a Boeing 737-8AS according to Flight Radar — engulfed in flames on what appeared to be the side of the runway, with firefighters and emergency vehicles nearby.

    “The cause of the accident is presumed to be a bird strike combined with adverse weather conditions. However, the exact cause will be announced following a joint investigation,” Lee Jeong-hyun, chief of Muan fire station, said during a briefing.

    A response team officer at the local fire department, Lee Hyeon-ji said rescue authorities had evacuated passengers from the rear section of the jet.

    The Muan International Airport is in Muan county, which is about 288 kilometres (179 miles) southwest of Seoul.

    The fire agency said it had mobilised 32 fire engines and scores of fire fighters to the scene.

    The accident took place at 9:03 am (0003 GMT) on Sunday during the landing of Jeju Air Flight 2216, the Ministry of Land said.

    “A total of 175 passengers — including two Thai nationals — and six crew members were onboard,” it said.

    The initial fire was extinguished and a search and rescue operation was “under way at the crash site”, it said in a statement at around 11:00 am local time.

    Low-cost carrier Jeju Air apologised and vowed to do all it could to help.

    “We at Jeju Air will do everything in our power in response to this accident. We sincerely apologise for causing concern,” the airline said in a statement posted on its social media channels.

    – Engulfed in flames –
    Acting President Choi Sang-mok called for the mobilisation of all resources to save the passengers.

    “All related agencies… must mobilise all available resources to save the personnel,” he instructed officials in a statement.

    Choi convened an emergency meeting with cabinet members to discuss rescue operations and response before heading to Muan, his office said.

    “I believe no words of consolation would suffice for the bereaved families who have suffered this tragedy,” said Choi, who took office only on Friday.

    “The entire government is working closely together to manage the aftermath of the accident, dedicating all available resources, while making every effort to ensure thorough support for the bereaved families,” he added.

    It is the first fatal accident in the history of Jeju Air, one of South Korea’s largest low-cost carriers, which was set up in 2005.

    On August 12, 2007, a Bombardier Q400 operated by Jeju Air carrying 74 passengers came off the runway due to strong winds at the southern Busan-Gimhae airport, resulting in a dozen injuries.

    South Korea’s aviation industry has a solid track record for safety, experts say.

    Last year, a passenger opened an emergency exit on an Asiana Airlines flight as it was preparing to land, with the aircraft landing safely but several people hospitalised.

    A number of fatal aviation accidents have occurred globally due to bird strikes, which can cause a loss of power if the animals are sucked into the air intakes.

    In 2009, a United States Airways Airbus A320 famously landed in New York’s Hudson River after bird strikes on both of its engines, in an incident widely known as the “Miracle on the Hudson” because there was no loss of life.

  • BLACK SUNDAY: Plane with 181 passengers onboard bursts into flames after landing

    BLACK SUNDAY: Plane with 181 passengers onboard bursts into flames after landing

    A passenger plane with 181 people onboard crashed in the South Korean city of Muan on Sunday.

    The plane, Jeju Air, which had malfunctioning landing gear veered off the runway, hit a fence, before going up in flames at the airport.

    The Jeju Air jetliner was carrying 175 passengers and six crew when it crashed on landing at the airport in Muan county.

    The ill-fated plane was returning from Bangkok in Thailand when the incident occured.

    AP News quoted South Korean media as reporting that the fire left over 28 people either dead or injured, while two people were evacuated to safety.

    South Jeolla province Fire Service Headquarters said that the number is expected to grow as recovery operations continue.

    The office said the fire was put out and rescue officials were trying to remove passengers from the aircraft.

    However, a fire department official who spoke to CNN said the airplane had been “almost completely destroyed” by fire.

  • BREAKING: Abuja airport runway closed as plane crash-lands

    BREAKING: Abuja airport runway closed as plane crash-lands

    An Allied Air cargo aircraft with registration number 5N-JRT has crash-landed at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA) in Abuja.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the incident has resulted in the temporary closure of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport’s runway.

    It was gathered that the Allied Air cargo aircraft crash-landed at the airport on Wednesday due to the failure of one of its landing gears.

    The incident occurred at approximately 10:05 a.m., involving an e-cargo aircraft carrying six crew members, with no casualties recorded.

    According to Zagazola Makama, a security analyst, the crew members were promptly evacuated and are currently undergoing medical assessments at the 063 Nigerian Air Force (NAF) medical unit.

    “Emergency responders acted swiftly to secure the crash site, cordoning off the area under the supervision of the Military Airport Commandant (MAC) and other relevant agencies.

    “The incident has led to the temporary closure of the airport’s runway, resulting in significant delays to inbound and outbound flights. Passengers and airlines are advised to expect disruptions until further notice.

    “Efforts are underway by airport authorities and the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) to remove the disabled aircraft and inspect the runway for potential damage. Officials are working to restore normal operations as quickly as possible.

    “The sources said that further updates will be provided as investigations into the incident progress,” Makama revealed.