State health official says one survivor and 204 Bodies Found After India Plane Crash
This frame grab from a video by @ashlovetea on June 12, 2025 made available on the Eurovision Social Newswire (ESN) platform via AFPTV shows a plume of smoke rising after Air India flight 171 crashed near the airport in Ahmedabad. ©AFP Photo / @ASHLOVETEA / ESN via AFPTV

One person survived when a London-bound passenger plane crashed Thursday in the Indian city of Ahmedabad, with 242 on board, a state health official told AFP.

"Yes, one survivor is confirmed," said Dhananjay Dwivedi, principal secretary of Gujarat state's health department. They were being treated in hospital, he added without further details.

The plane crashed shortly after the take-off, aviation officials said, in what the airline company, Air India, called a "tragic accident."

Investigators with the US National Transportation Safety Board will travel to assist Indian counterparts probing the brutal Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner crash, the agency announced Thursday.

"The NTSB will be leading a team of US investigators travelling to India to assist with (the) investigation into the crash of an Air India Boeing 787 in Ahmedabad, India," the agency said on X, adding that under international protocols, "all information on the investigation will be provided by the Government of India."

India's aviation minister said he was "shocked and devastated" by the crash in Ahmedabad, where an AFP journalist saw thick plumes of black smoke over the airport.

India's civil aviation authority said there were 242 people aboard, including two pilots and 10 cabin crew.

Air India said there were 169 Indian passengers, 53 British, seven Portuguese, and one Canadian.

The plane issued a mayday call and "crashed immediately after takeoff," the Directorate General of Civil Aviation said.

The authority said it crashed outside the airport perimeter.

Ahmedabad, the main city of India's Gujarat state, is home to around eight million people, and the busy airport is surrounded by densely packed residential areas.

Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu directed "all aviation and emergency response agencies to take swift and coordinated action."

"Rescue teams have been mobilized, and all efforts are being made to ensure medical aid and relief support are being rushed to the site," he added.

"My thoughts and prayers are with all those on board and their families."

"Our thoughts and deepest condolences are with the families and loved ones of all those affected by this devastating event," said the airline chairman.

204 Bodies Found

Police in the Indian city of Ahmedabad said they had collected 204 dead bodies after a London-bound passenger plane with 242 people on board crashed into residential buildings after takeoff on Thursday.

"We have found 204 bodies," city police commissioner GS Malik told AFP, adding that 41 injured people were "under treatment".

The dead included those from the plane crash and from buildings into which the plane smashed. "Rescue work is ongoing," he said.

UK PM Starmer calls Air India crash 'devastating’

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Thursday called scenes of the Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad "devastating", adding "my thoughts are with the passengers and their families".

"The scenes emerging of a London-bound plane carrying many British nationals crashing in the Indian city of Ahmedabad are devastating. My thoughts are with the passengers and their families at this deeply distressing time," Starmer said in a statement issued by his Downing Street office.

An emergency center has been activated and a support team set up for families seeking information, he added.

India has suffered a series of fatal air crashes, including a 1996 disaster when two jets collided mid-air over New Delhi, killing nearly 350 people.

In 2010 an Air India Express jet crashed and burst into flames at Mangalore airport in southwest India, killing 158 of the 166 passengers and crew on board.

Decades earlier, an Air India Boeing 747 flying from Montreal to London in June 1985 crashed into the sea off Ireland with 329 people on board and leaving no survivors.

An Indian commission determined that militant Sikhs had planted a bomb in baggage being carried by the plane.

India's airline industry has boomed in recent years, with Willie Walsh, director general of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), last month calling growth "nothing short of phenomenal".

The growth of its economy has made India and its 1.4 billion people the world's fourth-largest air market – domestic and international – with IATA projecting it will become the third biggest within the decade.

Air India ordered 100 more Airbus planes last year after a giant contract in 2023 for 470 aircraft – 250 Airbus and 220 Boeing.

India's domestic air passenger traffic reached a milestone last year by "surpassing 500,000 passengers in a single day," according to India's Ministry of Civil Aviation.


AFP

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