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Air India crash death toll reaches 270 as families await bodies

Families are increasingly upset by the delays in delivering badly burned bodies from the crash in Ahmedabad, a city in western India.

After takeoff, the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner carrying 242 passengers bound for Britain's Gatwick Airport started losing height and then exploded in a fiery fireball when it hit the buildings below. This was the worst aviation accident in 10 years.

Dhaval gameti, President of the Junior Doctors Association of B.J. Medical College, said reporters.

The plane hit the hostel of the Medical College as it fell, killing many passengers and crew.

The crisis has escalated

cast a shadow

Air India has struggled for years to rebuild its reputation and upgrade its fleet since the Tata Group acquired the airline in 2022 from the Indian Government. Tata chairman said that the group is trying to figure out what happened but, "we don't really know at this time."

Air India and Indian government looked at

The crash has many aspects

Reports have raised a number of issues, including those related to the thrust generated by the engine, the flaps and the reason why the landing gear was left open when the plane landed and took off.

Dozens

Anxious family members

Doctors were busy collecting dental samples to perform identification checks and DNA profiles on the dead. Families waiting to pick up the bodies of their loved ones who died in the accident.

Rafiq Abd Hafiz Memon said that he had lost four family members in the incident and that he did not get any answers from the authorities. He was also "very harassed".

"We lost our children. We don't understand anything." Please help us find out more about our children. "Tell us when they will release their bodies," Memon asked.

A father complained about not being able to retrieve the body of Harshad, his son. He said he had been told by the authorities that DNA profiling would take 72 hours. "The authorities are doing their best to assist, but our patience is wearing thin," he said.

The majority of the bodies were severely charred, and authorities used dental samples for identification checks.

Jaishankar Pillai is a forensic dental expert who told reporters Friday that they have the dental records for 135 victims whose teeth were charred. These records can be matched with previous dental charts, radiographs, or other records.

(source: Reuters)