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Sources say that Indian investigators have told Congress that the black boxes in the Air India crash were not damaged.

Two people who were present at the meeting said that Indian investigators in the Air India crash, which killed 260 people last month, told lawmakers that the black boxes of the aircraft had not been damaged.

Indian media reported that the devices crucial to reconstructing events leading up an air crash were damaged after the London bound Boeing Dreamliner crashed in June, erupting into a massive fireball.

One source said that the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau was also able to extract good data from the black boxes. Its officials had told the lawmakers during a panel discussion on aviation on Wednesday.

The discussions were private, so both sources declined to identify themselves. AAIB or India's Aviation Ministry did not reply to questions.

In the days following the crash, the plane's black boxes, the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recording, or FDR, as they are officially known, were recovered. One was found on a roof at the crash site on June 13 and the other in debris on June 16

According to previous reports, the preliminary report of the investigation into this crash will be released by Friday.

Last month, the crash investigation focused on the fuel control switches and, in part, the engine thrust problems.

Air India has been under intense scrutiny ever since the crash. One source said that Campbell Wilson, the chief executive of Air India, gave an update on the airline's efforts following the crash.

Air India Express' budget airline will be investigated by the EU Aviation Safety Agency after it was reported that it had falsified documents to prove compliance and failed to follow an order to replace engine parts on an Airbus A320 within a specified time frame.

India's aviation regulator has also issued a warning to Air India over the violation of rules in flying three Airbus aircraft with uncompleted checks on emergency slides. Reporting by Abhijith Gaapavaram and Nigam Prusty, Editing by Aditya Fernandez and Clarence Fernandez

(source: Reuters)