One year since AI-171 crash, pilots body questions delay in releasing final probe report
AI Summary
The Air India Boeing 787 that crashed in Ahmedabad on June 12, 2025, killing 260 people, has not produced a final investigation report by the one-year mark, with engine analysis by the aircraft manufacturer continuing. The airline has distributed interim compensation to the majority of affected families, but investigators, pilots' representatives, and survivors' families are raising concerns about investigation timelines, problems with remains identification and handling, and persistent unanswered questions about the crash cause.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets frame the investigation delay as a breach of international standards and a failure of accountability. They emphasize calls from pilots' representatives to complete the investigation fully before releasing any report, and stress the continuing absence of closure and answers for families.
Moderate: Centrist outlets focus on the technical factors behind delays—particularly unfinished engine manufacturer analysis—and document the human impact through families' struggles with remains identification. Their coverage is factual and empathetic without adopting a strongly critical stance.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets balance coverage of investigation delays with acknowledgment of the airline's progress in compensating families and place the delay in broader context of systemic issues affecting aviation accident investigations. Some reporting raises skepticism about investigation thoroughness and covers families' and professionals' demands for accountability.
The Federation of Indian Pilots urges authorities not to publish an incomplete interim report, warning that it could add to speculation on the cause of the June 2025 crash.
Officials say engine manufacturer General Electric is still analysing data from AI-171 engines, contributing to the delay. ...
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