logo
Air India crash victim's family furious after someone else's remains were also sent home in casket

Air India crash victim's family furious after someone else's remains were also sent home in casket

The Irish Sun5 days ago
THE family of a mum killed in the Air India crash has blasted Indian authorities after someone else's remains were also sent home in her casket.
NHS microbiologist Shobhana Patel, 71, died with her husband Ashok, 74, in the crash in June.
2
Shobhana Patel, 71, died with her husband Ashok, 74, in June's Air India crash
Credit: Supplied
2
The crash killed 260 people
Credit: Alamy
The couple, from Orpington, Kent, were repatriated in different coffins but DNA tests in Britain
Her son Miten, 40, said: 'I have no idea if the other remains were from more than one person.'
One family was sent the wrong body entirely.
India's Ministry of External Affairs said: 'All remains were handled with professionalism.'
READ MORE ON AIR INDIA CRASH
Lawyer James Healy-Pratt, representing around 20 families, said: 'They have been left in limbo.
'They have no-one to bury because the wrong body was in the casket.'
It is thought that only Indian authorities carried out DNA tests on victims with no input from any international agency.
Mr Healy-Prat added: 'I am hearing that it was Indian authorities alone who identified remains and then placed them in caskets.
Most read in The Sun
'The families want assurances that their loved ones have not been left behind somewhere in India because they don't have confidence in the system.
'They have had the terrible shock of losing a loved one and then they go through more trauma when they learn it is not only their loved one in the casket, or it may not be their loved one at all.'
How pilots cutting engines sparked TWO plane disasters after South Korea & India crashes as calls for cockpit CCTV grow
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

More woke madness as beloved ITV detective show has been slapped with trigger warning over ‘crime scenes'
More woke madness as beloved ITV detective show has been slapped with trigger warning over ‘crime scenes'

The Irish Sun

time13 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

More woke madness as beloved ITV detective show has been slapped with trigger warning over ‘crime scenes'

INSPECTOR Morse has been hit with his most baffling case yet — woke trigger warnings for the show's 'crime scenes'. ITV bosses fear viewers may get offended or upset while the mild-mannered Oxford detective solves his mystery of the week. Advertisement 1 Inspector Morse has been hit with a woke trigger warnings for the show's 'crime scenes' Credit: Alamy Streaming service ITVX even warns of 'Satanic images' in one episode of the crime drama, which ran from 1987 to 2000. Viewers must click past a parental control screen to watch series seven's 'Day of the Devil'. The episode sees Morse — played by One scene shows a Satanist being burned to death during a black mass. Advertisement read more on itv Many other episodes also have crime and violence warnings. Senior Tory MP Sir Alec Shelbrooke blasted: 'This is another example of soft-touch Britain seeping into everything. 'We're just going to be laughed at as a country if things like this continue, because nobody's prepared for the real world where there are no ITVX was contacted for comment on the Morse warnings. Advertisement Most read in News TV It previously said about Terry and June to get woke warning - 80s comedy show Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club.

Mother of Air India crash victim ‘heartbroken' after remains wrongly identified
Mother of Air India crash victim ‘heartbroken' after remains wrongly identified

Irish Examiner

time20 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Mother of Air India crash victim ‘heartbroken' after remains wrongly identified

The mother of a British Air India crash victim has said her family is 'heartbroken' after receiving news the remains of her son were wrongly identified, The Sunday Times reported. The London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner crashed into a medical college shortly after taking off from Ahmedabad Airport on June 12, killing 241 people on board. Some 169 Indian passengers and 52 British nationals were killed. Among the British victims were Fiongal Greenlaw-Meek, 39, and his husband Jamie, 45, who had been returning to Britain after celebrating their wedding anniversary in India. Mr Greenlaw-Meek's mother, Amanda Donaghey, told The Sunday Times she flew to India after the crash in order to find her son's remains, providing a DNA sample at Ahmedabad's Civil Hospital to assist the identification process. Following a match on June 20 last year, she returned to Britain with Mr Greenlaw-Meek's coffin. But on July 5, as Mr Greenlaw-Meek and his husband's families prepared to bury the married couple together, police told Ms Donaghey that DNA tests carried out in the UK showed Mr Greenlaw-Meek's remains were not in the coffin. 'We don't know what poor person is in that casket,' she told The Sunday Times. 'I had my doubts but to be told that was heartbreaking. 'This is an appalling thing to have happened,' she added. 'And we would now like the British government to do everything in its power to find out, and bring Fiongal home.' It was revealed last week the coffin of another repatriated British victim, 71-year-old Shobhana Patel, contained remains of multiple people, The Sunday Times reported. Mrs Patel was killed alongside her husband Ashok, 74, as they returned to the UK from a Hindu religious trip. Their son Miten Patel told The Sunday Times: 'There may have been a mistake done. 'But for religious reasons we need to make sure my mother is my mother and not somebody else's remains. 'Knowing 100% that it is my mum is very important to us.' Shobhana and Ashok Patel were laid to rest last week, The Sunday Times said. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer (right) with the Prime Minister of India, Narendra Modi (Kin Cheung/PA) International aviation lawyer James Healey-Pratt, whose firm Keystone Law is representing families of victims of the Air India crash, has told Times Radio the identification issues have raised concerns over the total number of victims whose identities may have been misattributed. 'We know that 12 caskets were repatriated from India to the UK,' he said. 'Of those 12, two had been mishandled, misidentified. 'And so if you extrapolate that sample, you're looking at 40 mishandled remains out of 240. 'So that's a very large number, but we simply don't know. 'And to date, the Indian authorities have not been transparent or helpful about that, which is why there was pressure put on by the families to the FCO and the Prime Minister's office. 'And this was actually mentioned in the meeting at Chequers between Keir Starmer and Prime Minister Modi on Thursday. 'So the families are waiting to hear, first thing next week, about what actions are really being done in India to provide some degree of assurance.' It is understood no blame is being put on any UK agency for the blunders, Mr Healy-Pratt previously told the PA news agency. The only surviving passenger on the plane was Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, who previously told The Sun it was a 'miracle' he was alive but felt 'terrible' he could not save his brother Ajay. A preliminary report into the incident from India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau found both of the plane's fuel switches moved to the 'cut-off' position 'immediately' after take-off, stopping fuel supply to the engine. It has sparked questions over whether the crash was deliberate. Read More India orders airlines to inspect certain Boeing models after Air India crash

Wild moment easyJet passengers pin down man who yelled ‘I've got a bomb' on board UK flight as cops swarm plane
Wild moment easyJet passengers pin down man who yelled ‘I've got a bomb' on board UK flight as cops swarm plane

The Irish Sun

time21 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Wild moment easyJet passengers pin down man who yelled ‘I've got a bomb' on board UK flight as cops swarm plane

THIS is the moment brave passengers banded together to tackle a man shouting that he had a bomb during an easyJet flight - before claiming he wanted to "send a message" to Donald Trump. The dramatic incident on Sunday morning (July 27) - caught on film and sent to The Sun - saw the packed jet forced into an emergency landing at Glasgow Airport. Advertisement 8 The man was pinned down by other passengers Credit: Supplied 8 They held him on the ground during the emergency landing Credit: Supplied 8 He was hauled off the aircraft in handcuffs Credit: Supplied The offender was then cuffed and hauled off the aircraft by around half a dozen cops, with panicked passengers left in tears. In the video, he can be heard saying: "I wanted to send a message to Trump... he's in Scotland." The US president is currently on a visit to the country and has been spotted playing golf over the weekend. 'I've got a bomb' A witness said he woke up suddenly around 8am, under an hour after taking off from Luton, to the man coming out of the toilets at the back of the plane causing a commotion. Advertisement READ MORE NEWS The passenger - who did not wish to be named - told us: 'He literally came out of the toilet shouting 'Allahu Akbar' with his hands above his head. 'Then he said 'I've got a bomb, I've got a bomb' - at this point people were confused. 'I thought he was joking, I mean it's a weird joke.' The 39-year-old - who was flying into the Scottish city for his dad's birthday party - went on to say: 'He pushed the airline staff and was being aggressive towards them. He was a big guy, about six foot and they were these petite women. Advertisement Most read in The Sun Exclusive Exclusive Breaking 'When he pushed them, that's when things changed. 'At that point one guy managed to grab him from behind and pull him down, then everyone jumped on top of him. Travel chaos as TWO flights have mid-air emergencies within A MINUTE at major UK airport 'He was fighting a bit on the floor, but at this point he knew he'd f***** up.' He described how three passengers pinned the man down, adding: 'I was right there, there wasn't much for me to do, so I thought I'll film it.' Advertisement The footage includes the flight attendants clambering over the seats in their high heels, as they went to check the man's bag, and 'realised there wasn't a bomb', the witness said. 'The pilot announced he was making an emergency landing and took the plane down so quickly," he continued. 'Everyone who wasn't restraining him was told to sit down. The three guys pinning him down, they landed whilst pinning him down. It was incredible. "I've never seen that before. The airline staff, they were all girls, they were really shaken up by it, but they were super professional.' Advertisement He added: 'Some of the passengers were crying because they were shaken up. It was just a bit surreal.' He said they had managed to get the man's wallet out of his pocket and he appeared to be an Indian national, and he was told he was carrying a refugee status card. As the plane came into land, the witness said he held up one of the passengers sat on the 'bomber' to prevent him toppling over. He said passengers feared they'd have to land elsewhere but actually came down at Glasgow, the flight's original destination, and 'taxied really quickly and then slammed on the brakes at a remote part of the runway'. Advertisement 8 Flight attendants clambered over the seats in their high heels Credit: Supplied 8 The easyJet aircraft came into land at a remote part of Glasgow Airport Credit: Supplied 8 The plane was then surrounded by cops and fire crews Credit: Supplied Fire engines then swarmed the scene before six police officers came on board the plane from the back. Advertisement The witness explained: 'The main copper didn't f*** around, he said 'look, don't mess about or you'll go straight down'. By this point the guy had calmed down. He'd admitted he didn't have a bomb. He gave up. 'We waited there on the runway for about 10 minutes, the guys still pinning him, waiting for the police - it wasn't very long but it felt like ages.' The witness, from London, and others involved were asked to stay behind to give statements and hand over video, while the other passengers were taken off the plane. In one piece of footage, as the offender is led out of the plane in handcuffs, he turns back and asks "my phone and wallet?" and someone can be heard saying "f*** off" before several passengers laugh. Advertisement A Police Scotland spokesperson said: 'We received a report of a man causing a disturbance on a flight arriving in Glasgow around 8.20am on Sunday, 27 July, 2025. 'A 41-year-old man was arrested in connection and further enquiries are ongoing.' An easyJet spokesperson said: "Flight EZY609 from Luton to Glasgow this morning was met by police on arrival in Glasgow, where they boarded the aircraft and removed a passenger due to their behaviour onboard. "easyJet's crew are trained to assess all situations and act quickly and appropriately to ensure that the safety of the flight and other customers is not compromised at any time. Advertisement "The safety and wellbeing of our customers and crew is always easyJet's highest priority." Do you know more? Email 8 The man told passengers he wanted to 'send a message' to Donald Trump Credit: Supplied 8 He asked for his phone and wallet as he was led away Credit: Supplied Advertisement

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