India top court asks for government response on plea for independent Air India crash probe

India top court asks for government response on plea for independent Air India crash probe
The Air India-operated Boeing 787 crash killed all but one of the 242 people on board and 19 others on the ground, after the plane lost thrust shortly after takeoff from the Ahmedabad airport. (Reuters)
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Updated 22 September 2025
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India top court asks for government response on plea for independent Air India crash probe

India top court asks for government response on plea for independent Air India crash probe

India’s Supreme Court on Monday asked the government to respond to a plea seeking an independent investigation into the Air India plane crash on June 12 that killed 260 people.
The top court was responding to a public interest litigation filed by NGO Safety Matters Foundation, marking its first examination of the probe being carried out by Indian authorities into the incident.
In a hearing on Monday, lawyers for the NGO questioned the inclusion of officials from the aviation safety regulator on the probe panel, saying it created a “conflict of interest“
“The investigation necessarily involves a critical examination of DGCA’s own regulatory actions and possible lapses,” the NGO’s plea said.
The Air India-operated Boeing 787 crash killed all but one of the 242 people on board and 19 others on the ground, after the plane lost thrust shortly after takeoff from the Ahmedabad airport.
A preliminary investigation report released earlier by the Indian government showed pilot confusion in the cockpit shortly before the crash after the plane’s fuel engine switches had almost simultaneously flipped from run to cutoff just after takeoff.
The report appeared to exonerate Boeing and engine maker GE Aerospace (GE.N), but some family groups have criticized investigators and the press for being too focused on the pilots’ actions.
“Three of the members are the serving officers of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (flight safety regulator), which creates a very serious conflict of interest,” the NGO’s lawyer Prashant Bhushan told the judges.
The court said it will review the demand for a “fair, impartial, and independent, and expeditious” investigation and it has asked the government to respond.
The case comes just days after a separate case was filed in the United States by families of four passengers against Boeing and Honeywell, which made the switches.


Syrian Embassy raises new flag in London to mark reopening after 12 years

Syrian Embassy raises new flag in London to mark reopening after 12 years
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Syrian Embassy raises new flag in London to mark reopening after 12 years

Syrian Embassy raises new flag in London to mark reopening after 12 years
  • Following collapse of Bashar Assad’s regime, new authorities adopted white, black, green flag with 3 stars
  • Al-Shaibani raised flag at UN headquarters in April

LONDON: Syrian Foreign Affairs Minister Asaad Al-Shaibani raised the new flag of the Syrian Arab Republic at the country’s embassy in London on Thursday, marking the reopening of the diplomatic building after 12 years of closure.

Following the collapse of Bashar Assad’s regime nearly a year ago, the new authorities in Damascus adopted a white, black, and green flag featuring three stars, which replaced the previous white, black, and red flag with two stars.

Al-Shaibani raised the flag at the UN headquarters in April, replacing the old flag of the United Arab Republic.

He is set to hold talks with several British officials while in London, according to the Syrian Arab News Agency.

Al-Shaibani met President Donald Trump during an official visit to the US this week alongside Ahmad Al-Sharaa, who became the first Syrian president to be invited to the White House, marking a new era for the country after Assad.