India, aircraft accident and Investigation
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Asianet Newsable on MSNAAIB Slams US Report on Air India Crash, Denies Claims on Pilot's Role: 'Unverified reporting'India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) has strongly criticised an international media report for spreading what it called ‘selective and unverified’ information about the June 12 Air India crash in Ahmedabad.
Final probe report on Air India plane crash will come out with root causes and recommendations, refrain from spreading premature narratives, says the investigation bureau
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NDTV Profit on MSNAI-171 Crash: AAIB Chief Urges To Refrain From Premature NarrativesAt this stage, it is too early to reach any definite conclusion regarding the Air India plane crash, the AAIB director general said.
The deadly Air India crash last month has renewed a decades-old debate in the aviation industry over installing video cameras monitoring airline pilot actions to complement the cockpit voice and flight data recorders already used by accident investigators.
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Asian News International on MSN"Conclusive that accident happened because both engines lost power": Aviation expert Ehsan Khalid on AAIB preliminary reportAviation expert Ehsan Khalid stated on Saturday that the preliminary findings of the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) indicate that the Air India crash in Ahmedabad occurred due to a loss of power in both engines.
Following the release of the AAIB's preliminary report on the Air India 171 crash, pilot associations ALPA and ICPA have voiced strong objections. ALPA criticizes the report's procedural flaws and perceived bias towards pilot error,
The statement from the UK regulator came amid intense speculation after India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) released its preliminary findings into the June 12 crash.
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Asian News International on MSN"Fault within aircraft that jet fuel switch turned off automatically": Civil aviation expert on AI171 preliminary crash reportCivil aviation expert Sanat Kaul has said that the preliminary report by the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) on the Air India flight AI171 crash suggests that "some fault within the aircraft" led to the jet fuel switches turning off automatically during takeoff,