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India News Updated Jun 13, 2026

AI-171 Crash Probe: No New Details One Year After 260 Died

The AAIB issued an interim statement one year after the AI-171 crash but provided no new technical findings. Aviation lawyer Mike Andrews, representing 135 affected families, criticized the lack of fresh details. The crash of the Boeing 787-8 from Ahmedabad to London killed 260 people. The final report remains delayed as investigators continue analyzing engine components and other evidence.

Lawyer representing AI-171 victims' families says interim statement offers no fresh details

Ahmedabad/New Delhi, June 13 One year after the crash of Air India flight AI-171, investigators have now said the probe remains ongoing, with additional technical evaluations and analysis still underway, while families of victims continue to await definitive answers about the disaster that claimed 260 lives.

The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) on Friday issued an interim statement marking the first anniversary of the accident involving the Boeing 787-8 operating from Ahmedabad to London.

The agency said that significant progress had been made in examining aircraft systems, flight recorder data, engine-related components, maintenance records and operational evidence, but stopped short of releasing any new technical findings or conclusions.

According to the AAIB, evidence gathered over the past year is being analysed in a comprehensive and integrated manner, and further specialist examinations will be carried out wherever necessary.

The bureau said the final report would be released only after all investigative activities, international review and consultation processes required under ICAO Annex 13 have been completed.

The interim statement also urged the media and the public to avoid speculation while the investigation remains in progress, reiterating that the purpose of an accident investigation is to improve aviation safety rather than assign blame or liability.

Reacting to the update, aviation lawyer Mike Andrews, who represents more than 135 affected families through US-based Beasley Allen Law Firm, said the statement contained no new information about the cause of the crash.

"The interim statement that was released today did not contain any new technical or factual information. The statement indicates that the AAIB investigation is continuing with technical evaluation and analysis. While we wait for the board to release the results of its findings, we continue to push forward with our own research and evaluation," Andrews said.

The AI-171 disaster occurred on June 12, 2025, shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport.

The aircraft crashed less than a minute after departure while operating a scheduled service to London Gatwick.

Of the 242 people on board, 241 died, while 19 people on the ground were also killed, taking the total death toll to 260.

A preliminary report released by the AAIB in July last year found that both engine fuel control switches moved from the "RUN" position to "CUTOFF" shortly after take-off, resulting in a loss of fuel supply to both engines.

The report documented cockpit confusion over the event but did not determine how or why the switches moved, leaving investigators to continue examining technical, operational and human factors associated with the accident.

The final report had been expected around the first anniversary of the crash, but investigators have indicated that additional analysis, including examination of engine-related evidence, remains unfinished.

Officials have said the complexity of the investigation has delayed completion of the report.

In its anniversary statement, the AAIB said it remained committed to conducting a thorough, independent and evidence-based investigation and that every aspect of the accident would continue to be examined before final conclusions and safety recommendations are published.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sarah B

I understand investigations take time, but a year with no progress is unacceptable. The families deserve transparency. The fact that the fuel cutoff switches moved is alarming—we need to know why.

Aman W

As someone who flies Ahmedabad-London frequently, this is terrifying. The preliminary report showed cockpit confusion over the fuel switches—sounds like a serious pilot or design issue. Hope AAIB gets to the bottom of this. Safety first! ✈️

Priya S

The lawyer representing the families is right—this interim statement is useless. "Continue to push forward with our own research"? That says a lot about how slow the official probe is. India needs better accountability.

James A

I remember this crash well. 260 lives lost in seconds. The AAIB should at least release more technical details so the public can trust the process. "No blame" is fine, but families want the truth.

Nisha Z

Respect to the AAIB for not rushing, but come on—one year and no concrete updates? The families deserve closure. I hope the final report brings reforms so such a tragedy never repeats. 🙏

Vikram M

This feels like déjà vu with Indian investigations. Remember the Boeing 737 Max crashes? Took years for clarity

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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