KOZHIKODE: The death toll in the Kozhikode plane crash that happened on Friday night has become 19. The last person who is reported to have died is 40-year-old Sinobia. She was under treatment in Kozhikode Medical college. Her end came early morning on Saturday.
About forty passengers were seriously injured in the accident.
As many as 171 passengers including flight crew members are being treated at various hospital in the district. In Malappuram hospital six persons have died.
The Express flight from Dubai was carrying 191. Among the 185 passengers in the plane 11 were children. Most of the children were below five years. Four cabin crew members and two pilots were inside the plane.
The plane had skidded off the table top runway in heavy rain and broke into pieces on Friday evening at Kozhikode airport in Kerala. The Boeing 737 overshot the runway at 7.41 PM and slid into a valley, said Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri, who has ordered an investigation.
The pilots, one of them a decorated former fighter pilot, had aborted two landings due to tailwind and had circled the airport several times before the final landing. The area had been slammed by torrential rains since Thursday.
"According to weather radar, the approach was for runway 28 but as the pilots faced difficulties, they went around twice and came from the opposite side on runway 10 and the plane crash-landed," news agency ANI quoted an investigator of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) as saying.
The officer said the aircraft was at full speed while landing and continued to the edge of the runway and fell over in the valley.
The Air India Express flight IX-1344 from Dubai to Calicut was operating under the Vande Bharat Mission to repatriate Indians stranded abroad because of coronavirus lockdowns. The Air India Express, a wholly owned subsidiary of Air India, has only B-737 aircraft in its fleet.
Many passengers were workers returning home after losing their jobs due to the pandemic. A worse tragedy was averted because the plane did not catch fire after the crash. In the heavy downpour, rescue personnel, including local policemen, pulled out people from the debris and jagged pieces of the plane's fuselage scattered on a slope. Little children, wailing in fear, were found trapped under seats.
Investigating officers from the DGCA, Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau, the CEO of Air India express and other officials of Air India and Air India Express were flown to Kozhikode early morning to inquire into what happened. An aircraft from Mumbai also took "Angels of Air India" -- grief counsellors -- and other employees to coordinate relief and assistance.
Help centers have been set up in Sharjah and Dubai. Some of the injured passengers are in a critical condition.
(With inputs from agencies)