Air India Plane Crash: Tata Group Announces ₹1 Crore to Families of Each Passenger Killed in Ahmedabad Tragedy
- A Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner carrying 242 people crashed shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad on June 13, 2025, bound for London Gatwick Airport.
- The aircraft issued a mayday call signaling an emergency but then lost altitude rapidly and did not respond to airport traffic control communications.
- The plane struck a medical college and nearby buildings in the Meghani Nagar neighborhood, killing at least 240 people and injuring many on the ground.
- One 40-year-old British Indian passenger, Vishwashkumar Ramesh, seated near an emergency exit, survived and is receiving treatment for multiple injuries including chest and eye wounds.
- Boeing pledged full cooperation with India’s investigation, while Air India’s chairman emphasized support for affected families amid the airline's recent $400 million fleet refit program.
208 Articles
208 Articles
It is not yet clear how many people died in the crash of the Boeing in Ahmedabad. The airline now announces additional financial support for the survivors.
In the crash of the passenger plane, almost all people are killed on board. The airline announces financial aid to the families of victims.
Air India offers Rs 25 lakh interim compensation to crash victims' families
New Delhi: Air India on Saturday announced that it will provide an interim compensation of Rs 25 lakh to the families of each person who lost their life in the tragic plane crash of flight AI 171 in Ahmedabad, as well as to the sole survivor. This amount is separate from the Rs 1 crore assistance already committed by Tata Sons. In a video message shared on social media platform X, Air India CEO and MD Campbell Wilson said that over 200 trained c…
Des Plaines family's kin among victims of Air India crash: 'Everywhere they went, they always went together'
As Adam and Hasina Taju grew older, they became concerned over who would pass away first in their marriage that spanned over half a century. They'd each save money so that the other was financially taken care of, just in case. "Who knew that God would take them both at the same time?" their son-in-law Wasim Musa told the Sun-Times from London. "They couldn’t live without each other, everywhere they went, they always went together." "And they wen…
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