
Air India Flight Crash: Plane Crashed Into Medical Students' Hostel in Ahmedabad: Shocking Images Emerge
Ahmedabad | June 12, 2025 – 4:23 PM IST
In a devastating aviation tragedy, Air India Flight AI171, en route to London Gatwick, crashed into a students’ hostel at BJ Medical College in Ahmedabad minutes after takeoff. The flight was carrying 242 individuals, including 230 passengers and 12 crew members.
Also Read: Ahmedabad Plane Crash LIVE: Chances of Survivors ‘Slim’; PM Modi Monitors Situation
Images from the crash site reveal harrowing scenes — a large portion of the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner embedded into the hostel building, with smoke and debris scattered across the premises. Some photos show canteen tables with food plates left untouched, indicating the abruptness of the incident.
Also Read: ‘Dead Bodies and Debris Everywhere’: Eyewitness Recounts Horror of Ahmedabad Plane Crash
The crash took place around 1:38 PM, shortly after departure from Runway 23 at Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport.
Air India has assured full cooperation with aviation authorities and rescue personnel.
Several injured individuals have been rushed to nearby hospitals. Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu is on site, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi has ordered a high-level probe and round-the-clock relief efforts.
Air India crash Ahmedabad, BJ Medical College hostel crash, AI171 London flight, Boeing 787 accident, aviation disaster India, NDRF rescue, PM Modi Air India crash, emergency relief
Just over two months after the premiere of his directorial debut, the Netflix series The…
Filmmaker Ram Gopal Varma (RGV) has once again stirred controversy by defending his descriptive comments…
Nine years after her terrifying 2016 Paris robbery, Kim Kardashian made a powerful statement of…
Bollywood icon Aishwarya Rai Bachchan captivated the audience at the Red Sea Film Festival 2025…
Amid concerns over air pollution stressing the body, the choice of dairy milk can play…
India's largest airline, IndiGo, is facing an unprecedented operational crisis, with over 1,000 flights cancelled…