KOZHIKODE: India’s civil aviation minister on Saturday warned against speculation over the cause of a disaster in which at least 18 people died after an Air India Express jet overshot a runway in a storm and plunged down a bank.
Critics have raised questions about potentially dangerous conditions at Kozhikode airport in the southern state of Kerala, where the Boeing 737 crash-landed with 190 passengers and crew aboard.
The plane’s black box recorders have been recovered, and will be examined as part of the investigation.
Reports have said the pilots made two attempts to land in the fierce winds and rain before the crash, while opposition politicians highlighted warnings that had reportedly been made about the Kozhikode runway.
Minister Hardeep Singh Puri acknowledged that issues had been “routinely red-flagged” by the civil aviation authority about the runway used in the crash but they had been “addressed” by the airport owner.
He added on Twitter: “I will encourage all to exercise patience and refrain from making speculative observations bordering on the irresponsible.”
Some 149 people were still in local hospitals after the crash of the special flight from Dubai to bring back Indians stranded by the coronavirus pandemic.
The jet plunged more than 10m down an embankment and broke in two. Rescue officials said it was “a miracle” that fuel that leaked did not catch fire.
Kozhikode is considered a tricky airport as it is built on a hill and has a “table-top” runway with a steep drop at one end.
In 2017, a Spicejet Bombardier Q-400 plane carrying 75 people came off the same runway when it was wet and hit lights on the edge.
Kerala has been hit by deadly floods and landslides in recent days and heavy rains had been falling for several hours at Kozhikode as the jet landed.
Indian media quoted air traffic control officials and a flight tracker website as showing the Boeing 737 twice circled and started to land before it crashed at the third attempt.
Blood everywhere
The jet repeatedly jumped up and down in buffeting winds before the landing, survivors told Indian television.
Passenger Renjith Panangad, 34, recalled the plane touching the ground and then everything went “blank”.
“After the crash, the emergency door opened and I dragged myself out somehow,” he told AFP from a hospital bed in Kozhikode.
“The front part of the plane was gone – it was completely gone. I don’t know how I made it but I’m grateful. I am still shaken.”
The impact was so brutal that the nose of the jet finished about 20m from the back half.
Most of the fatalities, who included the two pilots and four children, were in the front.
“All that we could hear were screams all around. People were soaked in blood everywhere, some had fractures, some were unconscious,” said local resident Fazal Puthiyakath who was among the first at the scene.
Local taxi drivers and traders joined airport rescuers to free people from the wreckage in the dark and wet. It took three hours to clear all the injured and bodies, officials said.
The flight was one of hundreds in recent months to bring home tens of thousands of Indians stranded abroad by the coronavirus pandemic, many of them in Gulf countries.
Kerala’s health minister K.K. Shailaja asked all those involved in the rescue to go into isolation because of the risk of catching the coronavirus from passengers.
The last major plane crash in India was in 2010 when an Air India Express Boeing 737-800 from Dubai to Mangalore overshot the runway killing 158 people.
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