Air India crash exposes Boeing’s bloody legacy
June 9, 2026
  • Read Ecopy
  • Circulation
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Android AppiPhone AppArattai
Organiser
  • ‌
  • Bharat
    • Assam
    • Bihar
    • Chhattisgarh
    • Jharkhand
    • Maharashtra
    • View All States
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • South America
    • Africa
    • Australia
  • Editorial
  • International
  • Opinion
  • RSS @ 100
  • More
    • Op Sindoor
    • Analysis
    • Sports
    • Defence
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Culture
    • Special Report
    • Sci & Tech
    • Entertainment
    • G20
    • Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav
    • Vocal4Local
    • Web Stories
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Books
    • Interviews
    • Travel
    • Law
    • Health
    • Obituary
  • Subscribe
    • Subscribe Print Edition
    • Subscribe Ecopy
    • Read Ecopy
  • ‌
  • Bharat
    • Assam
    • Bihar
    • Chhattisgarh
    • Jharkhand
    • Maharashtra
    • View All States
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • South America
    • Africa
    • Australia
  • Editorial
  • International
  • Opinion
  • RSS @ 100
  • More
    • Op Sindoor
    • Analysis
    • Sports
    • Defence
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Culture
    • Special Report
    • Sci & Tech
    • Entertainment
    • G20
    • Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav
    • Vocal4Local
    • Web Stories
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Books
    • Interviews
    • Travel
    • Law
    • Health
    • Obituary
  • Subscribe
    • Subscribe Print Edition
    • Subscribe Ecopy
    • Read Ecopy
Organiser
  • Home
  • Bharat
  • World
  • Operation Sindoor
  • Editorial
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Defence
  • International Edition
  • RSS @ 100
  • Magazine
  • Read Ecopy
Home Bharat

Dreamliner or Deathliner? Air India crash exposes Boeing’s bloody legacy and deadly gamble with passenger lives

A catastrophic crash of an Air India Boeing 787 Dreamliner in Ahmedabad has reignited global concerns over Boeing’s fatal design flaws and Air India’s continued reliance on the troubled aircraft. The tragedy, which claimed over 240 lives, exposes a pattern of corporate negligence, regulatory failure, and willful risk by Tata-owned Air India

WEBDESKWEBDESK
Jun 12, 2025, 05:40 pm IST
in Bharat, Gujarat
Follow on Google News
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppTelegramEmail

Smoke still rises over Meghaninagar. Charred metal and broken bodies litter the narrow lanes of this once-bustling Ahmedabad neighborhood, now transformed into a war zone by what may be one of the deadliest aviation tragedies in recent Indian history.

On June 12 afternoon, Air India Flight AI-171, a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner operated by Tata-owned Air India, crashed within minutes of takeoff from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport, headed toward London’s Gatwick Airport. Onboard were 232 passengers, 10 cabin crew members, and 2 pilots. Early videos captured by local residents show the aircraft engulfed in flames mid-air before slamming into the earth, exploding on impact.

Among the passengers was former Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani. As rescue workers clawed through debris searching for survivors, the death toll climbed rapidly. The aircraft disintegrated over the densely packed residential zone of Meghaninagar a scene now dominated by scorched buildings, twisted fuselage, and grieving families.

While official investigations have just begun, the aircraft involved a Boeing 787 Dreamliner is once again at the center of scrutiny. For Boeing, this is not the first, not the second, but yet another entry in a litany of fatal disasters involving its flagship aircraft series. For Air India, and its corporate owner Tata Sons, it raises a searing question: How many lives must be lost before accountability is enforced?

When Boeing launched the 787 Dreamliner in 2011, it was hailed as a revolution in aviation — promising fuel efficiency, lightweight carbon-composite design, and advanced avionics. But almost immediately, cracks in the dream began to appear — battery fires, manufacturing flaws, engine shutdowns, and structural failures.

The Ahmedabad crash is the latest in a string of 10 Dreamliner-linked disasters in recent years that have claimed thousands of lives globally. Just a glance at the record is harrowing:

  • Teyvat Airlines Flight 17 (2024): All 390 onboard killed.
  • Akira Airlines Flight 1636 (2023): 296 dead.
  • Orbit Air Flight 855 (2022): 304 fatalities.
  • Keyon Air Flight 354 (2019): 318 deaths.
  • Air Tantersbury Flight 241 (2020): 274 killed.
  • Schonineek mid-air collision (2020): A combined total of 653 deaths.
  • Hyderabad collision (2015), Vayikra crash (2022), Matica Park disaster (2016), Germuren Airport collision (2018) — hundreds more lives lost.

The cumulative toll of these 10 crashes exceeds 3,000 deaths — a staggering number by any standard. Still, the aircraft continues to fly, including over Indian skies.

The Boeing 787’s troubled legacy includes not only crashes, but also mid-flight cabin pressure drops, panel blowouts, engine shutdowns, and electrical system failures. In 2020, the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) temporarily halted 787 deliveries due to “structural integrity issues”. In 2021, Boeing acknowledged that “improper shimming” and “skin flatness” defects had gone uncorrected for years. Yet by 2022, Air India — newly privatized and absorbed into the Tata empire — was placing fresh orders for Dreamliners.

In 2022, when the Government of India handed over control of Air India to Tata Sons, many hoped for a renaissance.

Chairman N. Chandrasekaran’s statement after the crash offered condolences and a vague assurance of support for families.

Aviation analysts have warned that the Dreamliner, despite its advanced engineering, suffers from systemic design compromises that prioritize efficiency over resilience. Former Boeing engineers, including whistleblower John Barnett (who died under suspicious circumstances in 2024), pointed out that the 787’s carbon-fiber fuselage made detecting internal damage difficult and potentially fatal.

Even more damning, internal Boeing memos leaked in 2019 revealed that some employees feared boarding the very aircraft they were building.

Also Read: Air India flight with 242 passengers on board crashes near Ahmedabad Airport

India’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has also been complicit through its silence. After multiple international warnings about the Dreamliner, why was there no nationwide review? Why did the DGCA allow Boeing’s 787 to continue operating without mandatory airworthiness audits, especially after the 2020 Kozhikode crash of a Boeing 737 — another product of Boeing’s troubled production pipeline?

Sources within the aviation sector allege that lucrative contracts, lobbying pressure, and diplomatic entanglements have stifled regulatory oversight. Boeing, a crown jewel of American industry and a top defence supplier to India, is often shielded by diplomatic immunity.

The Dreamliner crash in Ahmedabad is not India’s first aviation heartbreak. From the skies above Charkhi Dadri in 1996, where 349 lives were lost in the world’s deadliest mid-air collision, to the Kanishka bombing in 1985 (329 killed by a terrorist bomb on an Air India 747), the country is littered with wreckage — literal and bureaucratic.

  • Mangalore crash (2010): 158 deaths.
  • Calicut crash (2020): 21 dead, 100 injured.
  • Bangalore A320 crash (1990): 92 dead.
  • Bombay monsoon crash (1982): 17 dead.
  • Patna crash (1998): 60 total fatalities, including ground casualties.
  • Ahmedabad crash (1988): 130 perished — chillingly, in the same city as Dreamliner disaster.

But what makes the Dreamliner tragedy of 2025 especially damning is not just its scale — but its predictability.

Topics: Air IndiaFAASardar Vallabhbhai Patel International AirportDreamliner tragedyAir India Boeing 787MeghaninagarBoeing
ShareTweetSendShareSend
✮ Subscribe Organiser YouTube Channel. ✮
✮ Join Organiser's WhatsApp channel for Nationalist views beyond the news. ✮
Previous News

Air India Plane Crash: Landing gear not retracted; Mayday call hints at Boeing Dreamliner engine failure

Next News

Final Journey of Vijay Rupani: Former Gujarat CM dies in Air India crash, nation remembers his leadership

Related News

Minister Piyush Goyal paid tributes to Kanishka bombing victims in Canada

Kanishka Bombing: Piyush Goyal pays tribute to victims in Canada; Reiterates commitment to uproot terrorism

Hamad International Airport

Air India, IndiGo to restart full operations at Doha Airport from May 1

Air India asks Hindus not to wear Bindi, sindoor or Tilak

After Lenskart, Air India’s grooming policy document goes viral; Bindi, sindoor, and tilak come under fire

Economists flag deflation, profit collapse and export losses as hard data contradict Beijing’s upbeat growth narrative

Fake ‘GDP growth’ claim jolts China as Xi faces deflation spiral, export collapse & global distrust over economic data

Representative image

Telangana: Two international flights receive bomb threat email at Hyderabad airport

Attempted hijack scare on Air India flight from Bengaluru to Varanasi: Passenger tries to open cockpit mid-air

Load More

Latest News

Beyond Alignment: How India is Carving Its Own Strategic Space Amid Global Power Play

Beyond Alignment: How India is Carving Its Own Strategic Space Amid Global Power Play

Chinese President Xi Jinping, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Narendra Modi

China’s New Tone Towards India: Tactical shift or strategic necessity? What Beijing’s push for RIC ties really signals

Keralam’s 2026 Fiscal Health White Paper has unveiled a mounting debt burden of Rs 5.07 lakh crore, exposing deep structural challenges in the state’s economy

Keralam’s Financial Reality Check: White Paper exposes Rs 5.07 lakh crore debt crisis

Tamil Nadu: TVK government arrests YouTuber Maridhas; BJP alleges crackdown on dissent

‘Every grave or dargah is not automatically Waqf property’: Madras High Court’s landmark verdict

US Court strikes down Trump’s $100,000 H-1B fee as executive overreach; Lawmakers & Republicans welcome the verdict

Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh

Uttar Pradesh: Defence land goes green; Rajnath Singh clears 250 MW solar project in Sitapur

Afghanistan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi and External Affairs Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar(File Photo)

India extends gratis long-term business visas to Afghan traders; Slams Pakistan for “trade & transit terrorism”

How Modi's Zero-tolerance doctrine reshaped India's anti-terror policy (This is an AI generated image)

Twelve Years of Modi Government and the rise of India’s zero-tolerance doctrine against terrorism

Press Conference organised by Janjati Suraksha Manch at the Press Club, Ranchi, National Convener Dr Raj Kishore Hansda

Success of Janjati Sanskritik Samagam symbolises unity and cultural pride: Dr Raj Kishore Hansda

Load More
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Cookie Policy
  • Refund and Cancellation
  • Delivery and Shipping

© Bharat Prakashan (Delhi) Limited.
Tech-enabled by Ananthapuri Technologies

  • Home
  • Search Organiser
  • Bharat
    • Assam
    • Bihar
    • Chhattisgarh
    • Jharkhand
    • Maharashtra
    • View All States
  • World
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • North America
    • South America
    • Europe
    • Australia
  • Editorial
  • Operation Sindoor
  • Opinion
  • Analysis
  • Defence
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Business
  • RSS @ 100
  • Entertainment
  • More ..
    • Sci & Tech
    • Vocal4Local
    • Special Report
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Books
    • Interviews
    • Travel
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Law
    • Economy
    • Obituary
  • Subscribe Magazine
  • Read Ecopy
  • Advertise
  • Circulation
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Policies & Terms
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Refund and Cancellation
    • Terms of Use

© Bharat Prakashan (Delhi) Limited.
Tech-enabled by Ananthapuri Technologies