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A London-bound Air India Dreamliner crashed shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad, killing at least 245 people, including former Gujarat CM Vijay Rupani. The Boeing 787-8, carrying 242 passengers and crew, failed to gain altitude, impacting near the airport.
NEW DELHI: In just 34 seconds, a routine takeoff turned into India’s deadliest single-aircraft crash. And in those same 34 seconds, three images, now etched into the nation’s memory, captured the full descent into horror.The first photo shows Air India’s London-bound Dreamliner moments after it lifts off from Runway 23 of Ahmedabad airport at 1.39pm. The aircraft, an 11-year-old Boeing 787-8, appears unusually low, barely clearing the airport perimeter. Its landing gear is still down. It isn’t climbing — it’s gliding flat, almost hesitantly, as if fighting an invisible drag. Flaps aren’t visibly engaged. For a wide-body aircraft carrying over 240 people, the trajectory looks disturbingly unnatural.
Flight AI-171 seen moments after lifting off from Ahmedabad airport, flying unusually low with its landing gear still deployed — the aircraft appears to struggle for altitude just 425 feet above the ground before vanishing behind buildings near Meghaninagar.
The second frame freezes the exact moment of impact. The aircraft, having lost altitude rapidly, tears into the BJ Medical College hostel mess in Meghaninagar. The image captures a deafening blast — an orange-white fireball erupting from the ground, hurling metal, glass, and flame into the sky. Black smoke begins to rise instantly. Eyewitnesses said they heard the plane coming in too low.
A massive explosion engulfs the BJ Medical College hostel building as the Dreamliner crashes into the doctors’ mess, triggering a fireball and dense black smoke that rose above the Meghaninagar skyline. Eyewitnesses described the sound as “like a bomb going off”.
The third photo is aftermath.
Nothing resembling an aircraft remains. The fuselage has splintered; debris strewn across the hostel quarters and adjacent lanes. A section of the empennage — the aircraft’s tail — hangs grotesquely from the roof of the mess building. The landing gear is embedded in a nearby wall. The crash site, just 3km from the end of the runway, looks like a war zone.
The mangled remains of Air India’s 787-8 Dreamliner sprawled across the residential block and mess hall — its tail section wedged into the rooftop and debris scattered across half a kilometre. The scale of destruction left little hope for survivors.
AI-171, with 242 passengers and crew onboard, had taken off late — and didn’t get far.
Captain Sumeet Sabharwal’s calm “Mayday” call to Ahmedabad ATC was the last transmission. After climbing to just 425 feet, the plane nosedived, leaving little time for response, and no chance for recovery.The crash killed at least 245 people, including former Gujarat CM Vijay Rupani and several doctors and residents on the college campus. One man, seated in 11A — a UK national of Indian origin — survived and walked out of the burning fuselage.
The death toll is expected to rise, with nearly 290 body bags in use by rescue teams.Initial probes point to a double engine failure, possibly due to bird strike — though investigators have not ruled out technical or procedural lapses. This was the first crash involving a Boeing 787 Dreamliner since its launch. The aircraft had logged over 41,000 flight hours, with 8,000 takeoffs and landings in the past year alone.The Tata Group has announced ₹1 crore compensation for each victim’s family and has pledged support to rebuild the BJ Medical College hostel.As firefighters, NDRF teams, and hospital staff sifted through the charred remains, the three photos — frozen moments from a tragedy — told the full story in a way words never could.