logo
AI 171 crew acted in line with responsibility under challenging conditions: Air India Pilots' grouping ICPA

AI 171 crew acted in line with responsibility under challenging conditions: Air India Pilots' grouping ICPA

Time of India15 hours ago
The Indian Commercial Pilots' Association (ICPA) on Sunday said the crew of the AI 171 flight that crashed last month acted in line with their training and responsibilities under challenging conditions, and the pilots should not be vilified based on conjecture.
Strongly rejecting insinuations in some quarters about pilot suicide, the association representing narrow-body pilots of Air India stressed that until the official investigation is concluded and the final report is published, any speculation is unacceptable and must be condemned.
It may be noted here that the Airline Pilots' Association of India also had on Saturday demanded a fair and fact-based probe into the Air India plane crash as it claimed that the tone and direction of the investigation into the Air India plane crash suggests a bias towards pilot error.
ICPA is the narrow-body fleet pilots' body at Tata Group-owned Air India.
The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) has released its preliminary report into the fatal Boeing 787-8 plane crash on June 12 that killed 260 people. The report has found that the fuel supply to both engines of Air India flight AI171 was cut off within a second of each other, causing confusion in the cockpit and the airplane plummeting back to the ground almost immediately after taking off.
Live Events
The 15-page report says that in the cockpit voice recording, one unidentified pilot asked the other why he had cut off the fuel, which the other denied.
In its preliminary report on the crash of Air India's AI 171 flight from Ahmedabad to London Gatwick on June 12 that killed 260 people, the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) on Saturday said the fuel switches of the Boeing 787-8 aircraft were cut off soon after takeoff.
"In the cockpit voice recording, one of the pilots is heard asking the other why did he cutoff. The other pilot responded that he did not do some," the report said.
ICPA on Sunday said it is deeply disturbed by speculative narratives emerging in sections of the media and public discourse-particularly the reckless and unfounded insinuation of pilot suicide.
"There is absolutely no basis for such a claim at this stage, and invoking such a serious allegation based on incomplete or preliminary information is not only irresponsible -- it is deeply insensitive to the individuals and families involved," it said in a statement.
The association emphasised that pilots undergo extensive psychological and professional screening, recurrent training, and operate under the highest standards of safety, responsibility, and mental fitness.
Noting that ICPA trusts and respects the rigorous investigative protocols established by competent authorities, it said these inquiries are designed to uncover facts methodically and without bias.
"Until the official investigation is concluded and the final report is published, any speculation, especially of such a grave nature, is unacceptable and must be condemned.
"... the crew of Al 171 acted in line with their training and responsibilities under challenging conditions. They deserve support, not vilification based on conjecture," it added.
AAIB, in the preliminary report, said investigation is continuing and the investigation team will review and examine additional evidence, records and information that is being sought from the stakeholders.
"The tone and direction of the investigation suggest a bias towards pilot error... ALPA India categorically rejects this presumption and insists on a fair, fact-based inquiry," Airline Pilots' Association of India (ALPA) had said in a statement on Saturday.
The association has also demanded that its representatives should be observers in the investigation process to ensure transparency and accountability.
ALPA India is a member of the International Federation of Airline Pilots' Association (IFALPA).
"We are once again surprised at the secrecy surrounding these investigations. We are also reiterating the fact that suitably qualified personnel are not taken on board for these crucial investigations," ALPA India alleged in the letter.
"We feel that the investigation is being driven in a direction presuming the guilt of pilots and we strongly object to this line of thought," it alleged.
Noting that the report refers to a serviceability bulletin concerning the fuel control switch gates, which indicates a potential equipment malfunction, the association said, "while the bulletin exists, ALPA India demands clarity on whether the recommendations outlined in the bulletin were implemented prior to the flight."
Air India has said it will take on board its pilot community by holding dedicated sessions in the coming days to review the
preliminary investigation report
.
Economic Times WhatsApp channel
)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Hindu Morning Digest: July 14, 2025
The Hindu Morning Digest: July 14, 2025

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

The Hindu Morning Digest: July 14, 2025

No urgent safety concern in Air India crash report: FAA The U.S. aviation safety regulator Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has written to its counterparts around the world acknowledging the preliminary findings into the Air India Boeing 787-8 crash of June 12 and informing them that the report has 'found no urgent safety concerns' related either to the engines or airplane systems of the Boeing 787-8, according to a senior official of the Ministry of Civil Aviation. Wimbledon 2025 | Sinner finds salvation in hallowed grass, dethrones Alcaraz Jannik Sinner's emotionally restrained, methodical and precise tennis earned its greatest gift yet as he dethroned two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 to win his first Wimbledon and fourth Major title. Concerns grow as Kerala reports sixth Nipah case within a year A fresh Nipah case in Palakkad district has sent alarm bells ringing and sparked fears that the deadly virus hasn't been contained despite the best efforts of the health authorities. Today's India looks ambitious, fearless, confident, and full of pride, says astronaut Shubhanshu Shukla Ahead of his journey back to Earth, Indian astronaut Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla on Sunday (July 13, 2025) said that today's India looks ambitious, fearless, confident, and full of pride. Odisha girl critical after self-immolation bid; BJD, Congress attack BJP government A political storm has broken out in Odisha after a 20-year-old student set herself on fire on a government college campus in Balasore on Saturday (July 12, 2025) as her complaints of sexual harassment by a faculty member had been allegedly ignored by the authorities. 'U.S. donkey route' case: human traffickers also used fake visas Fake visas were also being used by human traffickers to send Indians abroad, the Enforcement Directorate has found during its probe into the 'US donkey route' case linked to the deportation of illegal immigrants from the United States in February. Railways to install CCTV cameras in 74,000 coaches, 15,000 locomotives for safety Following the experimental installation of CCTV cameras in passenger coaches in the Northern Railways, the Indian Railways has decided to install CCTV cameras in all of its approximately 74,000 coaches across the countrywide rail network, officials of the Union Ministry of Railways said on Sunday (July 13, 2025). Missing DU student's body recovered from Yamuna after 7 days The body of a 19-year-old Delhi University student, who had been missing since July 7, was retrieved from the Yamuna river near the Geeta Colony flyover on Sunday evening, the police said. IND vs ENG Lord's Test Day 4: Late strikes boost England in gripping contest It was pure cinema at Lord's on Sunday. There were heated arguments, animated conversations between players, and some banter among the fans over the time strategy. And adding to the ebb and flow of the fourth day's play, England bounced back, picking up three quick wickets in the final 30 minutes to reduce India to 58 for four. Cole Palmer leads Chelsea to 3-0 win over PSG to win FIFA Club World Cup Cole Palmer rang up two goals and one assist in a sensational first half and Chelsea toppled Paris Saint-Germain 3-0 to win the FIFA Club World Cup on Sunday.

Not AAIBly Done
Not AAIBly Done

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

Not AAIBly Done

Why the unsigned AI 171 accident report patently fails to meet the test of credibility If the sole purpose of investigations is to meet deadlines, Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau has done well. International rules gave it 30 days to submit a preliminary report about June 12's AI 171 Dreamliner crash, and it pushed 15 pages past the finish line on Saturday. Unfortunately, most experts have assessed the report to be short on substance. Preliminary reports cannot be conclusive, but they should begin to shed light. Families of the 270 deceased and the rest of humanity are none the wiser. The report's authors admit: 'At this stage…no definitive cause has been determined.' All we know for sure now is that three seconds after takeoff, fuel supply to both engines stopped. Two possibilities arise. A pilot cut it off by flipping two switches – one for each engine. Or that the switches were faulty. Without facts, plausibility is a matter of preference. Are humans more fragile than mechanical devices? Deliberately switching off engines at 650ft is suicidal, yet some would subscribe to this view. The issue with AAIB's report is that it appears to push this possibility. It says one pilot asked the other why he had flipped the switches, and the other replied he hadn't. We don't know the pilots' exact words, nor who asked and who answered. We don't know what was said before and after. Just two cherry-picked sentences paraphrased in a way that they slyly implicate the two pilots who cannot defend themselves anymore. If pilot dialogue is material to the probe, so is the fact that seven years ago the US aviation regulator found fuel control switches used in some Boeing 737s – similar to those in Dreamliners – had been installed with their locking feature disengaged. VT-ANB – the lost Dreamliner – was built four years before that discovery. AAIB's report acknowledges this possibility, but doesn't buttress it like the alternate possibility of deliberate pilot action. The fact that no active airline pilots were involved in the investigation, and that the report was submitted unsigned, raises more questions. As does Western media's access to these findings two days before their official release. AAIB has met its deadline and may consider its job done, but considering how its 'narrative' – the 'findings' are ambiguous – has injured the reputations of AI 171's pilots, it should reveal its findings in detail. Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email This piece appeared as an editorial opinion in the print edition of The Times of India.

The 10-second mystery: Did the Air India crash report hide more than what it revealed?
The 10-second mystery: Did the Air India crash report hide more than what it revealed?

Economic Times

time3 hours ago

  • Economic Times

The 10-second mystery: Did the Air India crash report hide more than what it revealed?

The country has been in mourning for three months now. First, a brutal terror attack in Kashmir's Pahalgam killed several innocent tourists. And then the devastating crash of an Air India Boeing 787 in Ahmedabad that claimed 260 lives. While the first tragedy prompted a swift military response, some sense of closure emerged for the second late Friday night with the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) releasing its preliminary report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store