‘My memories are frozen on June 12’: A year on, families of AI-171 victims still searching for answers
While compensation from the airline and government has helped address immediate financial concerns, several relatives of the victims say no amount of money can replace the lives lost in one of India’s worst aviation tragedies
Account subscription benefits alongside Premium Stories, Editorials, Opinions and more. Unlock these with Subscription
The View From India Looking at World Affairs from the Indian perspective.
First Day First Show News and reviews from the world of cinema and streaming.
Today's Cache Your download of the top 5 technology stories of the day.
Data Point Decoding the headlines with facts, figures, and numbers
Health Matters Ramya Kannan writes to you on getting to good health, and staying there
The Hindu On Books Books of the week, reviews, excerpts, new titles and features.
Sureshbhai Patani, father of Akash Patani who died in the tragic Air India AI-171 crash on June 12, 2025, with his wife Sitaben Patani at his residence near the plane crash site in Ahmedabad, Gujarat. | Photo Credit: VIjay Soneji
For weeks after surviving the Air India flight AI-171 crash, Sitaben Patani kept asking about her teenage son. The answer was one her family could not muster the courage to reveal: 15-year-old Akash Patani had been killed in the air disaster that left his mother battling severe burns and hundreds of families grieving.
On the afternoon of June 12 last year, Akash had delivered lunch to his mother at her pushcart tea stall when the London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner crashed moments after taking off from Ahmedabad’s Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport. The aircraft went down barely minutes after departure, killing 260 people, including 241 passengers and crew members and 19 people on the ground. Akash was among the ground victims. Twenty days later, his grandfather Babubhai Patani also died, family members say, unable to cope with the loss.
Sureshbhai Patani, an autorickshaw driver and Sitaben’s husband, said: “She had suffered 35% burns and was in tremendous pain. We felt that telling her about Akash and my father’s death could affect her recovery.” Living in Laxminagar, a neighbourhood adjoining the airport, the family was among those directly caught in the aviation disaster.
“We did not tell her about Akash or my father’s death because she was already in immense pain and had suffered third-degree burns. We were worried that the news would affect her chances of recovery,” Mr. Patani added.
Mr. Patani, who was inconsolable on recalling the incident, said: “I learnt about their deaths only after I was discharged from Civil Hospital and admitted to a private hospital, nearly a month after the crash.”
Wiping away her tears, she said not a single day had passed without her thinking about Akash. “I could not even see him one last time. My memor
📌 Kaynak
Bu özet The Hindu (IN) kaynağından otomatik derlenmiştir. Tamamı için orijinal habere gidin.
Orijinal haberi oku →