One Man Lives, Brother Dies in Air India Crash

By Nikki Thrace • Jun 25, 2025
Exit Row Miracle: Lone Passenger Walks From Deadly Air India Crash

In one of the most harrowing aviation disasters in recent history, a single man emerged from the wreckage — alive. While 241 lives were lost when Air India Flight 171 plummeted into a residential neighborhood in Ahmedabad, 40-year-old Vishwashkumar Ramesh defied every conceivable odd.

A Tragedy in the Skies

On June 12, a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner bound for London crashed just moments after takeoff, bursting into flames as it collided with a building and a nearby medical college. The plane, carrying 242 people, killed nearly everyone aboard and several bystanders on the ground — including five medical students, a 15-year-old boy, and a grandmother delivering lunch with her 2-year-old granddaughter, NPR reported.

Authorities confirmed on June 24 that 260 people were killed in total, including victims on the ground, and all but one of the deceased have been identified, according to Reuters.

Ramesh, seated in 11A, found himself flung from the plane after it split in two during descent. Medics reported that he was found bloodied and disoriented, yet conscious and mobile. He reportedly walked himself to a nearby ambulance after the impact.

Watch on YouTube
Watch on YouTube

'I Just Walked Out'

Video footage from local news channels showed a dazed Ramesh clutching his phone as he moved away from the smoldering debris. He later told The Hindu from his hospital bed, according to NPR, "I just walked out, innit ... I can't explain, it's a miracle, everything."

According to a doctor at Ahmedabad's Civil Hospital, Ramesh had sustained multiple injuries across his body but was no longer in critical danger. A medic said Ramesh recounted seeing the aircraft suddenly descend, then break apart midair before he was violently ejected.

Family and Heartbreak

The survivor's family, still in shock, said they were relieved to hear from Ramesh, though devastated by the loss of his brother, who was also on board. "He only said that he's fine, nothing else," cousin Ajay Valgi told the BBC, as reported by the Associated Press, adding the family was “still upset about the other brother."

According to the Associated Press, his brother Nayan Kumar Ramesh told Sky News that moments after the crash, Vishwashkumar video-called their father, saying, "Oh the plane's crashed. I don't know where my brother is. I don't see any other passengers. I don't know how I'm alive, how I exited the plane."

View post on Instagram
 

Investigations Underway

India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau, with support from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board and British experts, has begun an in-depth probe. The aircraft's black box was recovered from a rooftop, marking a critical step in the inquiry.

India's Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu emphasized the need for a transparent investigation. In the meantime, India's aviation watchdog has mandated extra safety checks on Boeing 787-8 and 787-9 aircraft as a preventative measure.

Industry Red Flags

While India has grown into the world's third-largest domestic aviation market, experts warn that the industry's rapid expansion may be outpacing its safety infrastructure. Aviation analyst Amit Singh told NPR that "there's a lack of trust" between regulators and operators, noting that many within the safety community "were expecting something big to happen."

Another expert, Mohan Ranganathan, criticized the proximity of tall buildings — one of which was hit by the crashing plane — as a serious safety violation. He accused the government-run airport authority of issuing licenses without proper checks, warning, "Mumbai is a time bomb waiting to happen."

Corporate Response and Compensation

Tata Group, which owns Air India, pledged full transparency and committed over $100,000 in compensation to each victim's family. "We will be completely transparent about the findings," Chairman N. Chandrasekaran said in a statement, according to NPR, promising ongoing medical support for the wounded.

Survivor, Not Unscathed

As Vishwashkumar Ramesh begins to recover from both physical injuries and emotional trauma, his story stands as a surreal reminder of life's fragility. From a sea of tragedy, his survival is not just improbable — it is a miracle.

References: Lone Passenger Survives the Deadly Air India Crash | Indian Authorities Begin Investigating Air India Crash in Which 1 Passenger Survived | Authorities identify all but one of 260 victims of Air India plane crash

The Truthfully team was assisted by generative AI technology in creating this content
Trending