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India's top court requests government response to plea for independent Air India crash investigation

The Supreme Court of India on Monday ordered the government to respond in a petition seeking an independent investigation on the Air India plane accident on June 12, which killed 260 people.

The top court responded to a public-interest litigation filed by the NGO Safety Matters Foundation. This was its first review of the investigation being conducted by Indian authorities.

Lawyers for the NGO in a Monday hearing questioned the inclusion on the panel of the officials of the aviation safety regulator, saying that it created a conflict of interest.

The NGO said that "the investigation must include a critical review of DGCA’s own regulatory actions, and any possible lapses", in its plea.

Air India's Boeing 787 crashed in Ahmedabad, killing all but one person on board. The plane also killed 19 people on the ground.

The Indian government released a preliminary report on the investigation. It showed confusion among the pilots in the cockpit just before the crash. This was after the fuel engine switches were switched from run to off almost simultaneously, shortly after takeoff.

Some family groups criticised the investigation and press for focusing too much on the pilots’ actions.

Prashant Bhujan, the lawyer for the NGO, told the judges that "three of the members were serving officers of Directorate General of Civil Aviation" (flight safety regulator), creating a serious conflict of interests.

The court has said that it will examine the request for an "impartial, independent, fair, and swift" investigation. It has also asked the government to provide a response.

This case is just days after four families of passengers filed a separate lawsuit in the United States against Honeywell and Boeing, who made the switch.

(source: Reuters)