Air India crash: Grief turns into anger as families continue agonising wait for bodies

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AHMEDABAD - Anger has been mounting among family members of passengers on board the ill-fated Air India plane that crashed in Ahmedabad as they face an agonising wait for the bodies of their loved ones.

All but one of the 242 passengers and crew on board were killed in the June 12 crash, with an additional unconfirmed number of fatalities feared on the ground. Flight AI171, operated with a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, had rammed into a hostel mess at the western Indian city’s Byramjee Jeejeebhoy (BJ) Medical College and Civil Hospital, erupting into a large ball of fire.

Dr Dhaval Gameti, president of the Junior Doctors’ Association at the BJ Medical College, told reporters on June 14 that 270 bodies had been recovered from the crash site, with more bodies potentially still stuck under rubble.

Thirty-two injured persons from the site have also been admitted to Civil Hospital.

Only eight bodies – those that were identified visually – have been handed over to family members, with the rest to be released after DNA matches, which doctors said could take up to 72 hours.

But the patience of family members is wearing thin, with grief beginning to give way to rage as some question the agonising wait marked by a lack of official and regular communication from the authorities to the victims’ families and media.

Mumbai resident Rafiq Abdul Aziz Memon, whose nephew was on the flight with his wife and two children, said his relatives had already turned in their DNA samples but he had yet to receive any clear information on the state of the bodies of his loved ones.

Mumbai resident Rafiq Abdul Aziz Memon, whose nephew was on board the flight with his wife and two children, said he is worried about the condition of their bodies currently in storage at the mortuary in Civil Hospital.ST PHOTO: DEBARSHI DASGUPTA

“In two days, all I have been hearing is 72 hours, 72 hours. When will these 72 hours end, nobody knows. They will then bring up some other excuse after 72 hours,” an angry and distressed Mr Memon told reporters outside the BJ Medical College. “Stop this DNA game… We want to see th...

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