
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On a June morning, Air India flight AI171 lifted off from Ahmedabad, bound for London. The aircraft was a Boeing 787 Dreamliner — among the most advanced long-haul jets in service. But less than a minute after takeoff, the plane crashed. Two hundred and sixty people were killed. Only one survived. It was India’s deadliest air disaster in nearly three decades.
Now, a preliminary investigation points to a chilling cause: fuel to both engines was cut off just after takeoff. The engines lost thrust. The plane had neither the altitude nor the time to recover.
What happened in those final seconds? Was it a technical failure or human error?
Guest: Jagriti Chandra, Special Correspondent at The Hindu covering aviation
Host: Anupama Chandrasekaran
Produced and edited by Jude Francis Weston
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By The Hindu4.5
3737 ratings
On a June morning, Air India flight AI171 lifted off from Ahmedabad, bound for London. The aircraft was a Boeing 787 Dreamliner — among the most advanced long-haul jets in service. But less than a minute after takeoff, the plane crashed. Two hundred and sixty people were killed. Only one survived. It was India’s deadliest air disaster in nearly three decades.
Now, a preliminary investigation points to a chilling cause: fuel to both engines was cut off just after takeoff. The engines lost thrust. The plane had neither the altitude nor the time to recover.
What happened in those final seconds? Was it a technical failure or human error?
Guest: Jagriti Chandra, Special Correspondent at The Hindu covering aviation
Host: Anupama Chandrasekaran
Produced and edited by Jude Francis Weston
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

154 Listeners

11 Listeners

56 Listeners

58 Listeners

88 Listeners

104 Listeners

43 Listeners

23 Listeners

12 Listeners

3 Listeners

12 Listeners

9 Listeners

9 Listeners

95 Listeners

12 Listeners