Sunday, June 29, the Indian Minister responsible for civil aviation, Murlidhar Mohol, said that no track was currently excluded concerning the origin of the Crash of the Boeing 787 of Air India, not even that of sabotage.
The investigation continues to determine the causes of the Boeing 787 Crash of Air India which crashed on June 12, killing at least 279 people. In an interview on the Indian news channel NDTV, Murlidhar Mohol, the Indian Minister responsible for civil aviation, does not exclude any track, not even that of a sabotage of the engines.
Second deadliest air disaster since 2014, the government representative affirms that “The two engines have stopped working”which caused the crash. He also claims that the pilot transmitted an alert message directly after leaving the takeoff track of Ahmedabad airport, in the northwest of the country. A video broadcast after the crash shows the apparatus trying to take off but failing to gain altitude before crashing on the ground. A single passenger, sitting near an emergency exit at the front of the aircraft, miraculously survived, unlike the 242 people aboard the plane which crashed in a residential area of ​​the city shortly after taking off, killing at least 38 people on the ground.
A report soon published
“The (survey) report will allow us to say if the engines have had a problem, if it is a question of food in kerosene and why the two engines have stopped working” says Murlidhar Mohol. The black boxes and the flight recorder are still studying and the Minister responsible for civil aviation has committed to disclosing a report by the next three months to establish the cause of the crash. The president of Air India tried to defend himself by ensuring that the maintenance history of the device was correct.
Posted on June 29 at 5:04 p.m., Marin Paulay, 6media