
New Delhi: Four months after the AI-171 plane crash in Ahmedabad, the father of deceased Captain Sumeet Sabharwal, and the Federation of Indian Pilots have moved the Supreme Court seeking a court-monitored inquiry headed by a former apex court judge into the June 12 crash. Air India flight AI171 went down shortly after takeoff in Ahmedabad, killing 260 people.Pushkaraj Sabharwal, father of late Captain Sabharwal, who served as the Pilot-in-Command of the doomed flight, submitted that the AAIB report was "profoundly flawed." The investigation team had predominantly focused on the deceased pilots, who are no longer able to defend themselves, while failing to examine more plausible technical and procedural causes of the crash, they said."Selective
disclosure against crew impedes root cause discovery and threatens future flight safety, calling for a neutral judicial lens," it added.The report contains perversity and critical inconsistencies, they charged, adding that it lacked credibility and transparency. The deployment of the emergency generator, the Ram Air Turbine (RAT), before the crash is a direct indicator of an electrical or digital malfunction and contradicts the report’s inference that pilot actions initiated power loss.
On September 22, the top court said certain aspects of the AAIB preliminary report on the crash indicated lapses on the part of pilots, and had issued notices to the Centre and the Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on another plea seeking an independent, fair and expeditious probe.Pushkaraj Sabharwal, 91, has sought a "fair, transparent and technically robust" investigation into the tragic incident."An incomplete and prejudiced inquiry, without identification of the exact cause of the accident, endangers the lives of future passengers and undermines aviation safety at large, causing a violation of Article 21 of the Constitution," the plea said.The petition, filed through AP&J Chambers on October 10, made the Union Ministry of Civil Aviation, the DGCA , and the Director General of the Aircraft Accident Investigation Board (AAIB) as respondents, and is likely to come up for hearing after Diwali vacation.The plea seeks directions for the constitution of an independent committee, comprising aviation and technical experts also, to probe the crash that killed 229 passengers, 12 crew members, and 19 people on the ground.The ill-fated aircraft had taken off from Ahmedabad for London Gatwick but crashed within minutes, impacting the BJ Medical College hostel located less than a nautical mile from the end of runway.The debris was strewn over an area of nearly 1,000 by 400 feet, indicating a high-energy impact.The Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT) failed to activate, and both the pilot-in-command Captain Sumeet Sabharwal and co-pilot Captain Clive Kunder lost their lives in the crash, the plea said.The petition said that the official investigation conducted by the AAIB and the DGCA is “defective, biased, and technically unsound”.