International
Missed by Minutes: passenger recounts emotional escape after deadly Air India crash in Ahmedabad

A woman who narrowly missed boarding the Air India flight that crashed into a densely populated residential area near BJ Medical College in Meghani Nagar shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad has shared her emotional experience in a live interview with Republic World.
Bhoomi Chauhan, who was travelling alone to London, where her husband lives, after she had worked and returned to India for holidays, said she arrived at the airport just 10 minutes late due to heavy traffic and missed the flight.
READ ALSO: At least 242 on board Air India flight to London that crashed after takeoff in Ahmedabad
The plane, a Boeing 787 Dreamliner, was bound for London but crashed shortly after takeoff, killing at least 170 people as of 12:30 p.m. Ghana time, while rescue teams were still working at the crash site.
JoyNews monitored the live interview, where Bhoomi recounted the moment she heard the devastating news. “I am completely devastated after hearing about this tragedy. My body is still shivering,” she said.
According to Bhoomi, she left the airport around 1:30 p.m. Indian time after missing the flight and was confused and heartbroken upon learning about the crash minutes later.
“I can’t even talk,” she said, her voice trembling during the live interview, trying to understand what happened.
Devastated yet grateful, she headed home, haunted by thoughts of what could have been. Her story is one of many fragility of life, and the thin line between survival and loss.
The incident has shocked the nation and raised fresh concerns about the aircraft involved. Sources say the same Boeing aircraft had a reported technical issue in December 2024, though it was identified and addressed at the time.
Videos circulating on social media showed thick black smoke rising from the crash site as emergency services rushed to the scene. Over 240 passengers were on board at the time of the accident.
“Of these, 169 are Indian nationals, 53 are British nationals, 1 Canadian national and 7 Portuguese nationals. The injured are being taken to the nearest hospitals,” Air India said.
Ahmedabad Police Commissioner, G.S. Malik, said there appear to be no survivors from the Air India plane. He said the aircraft went down in a residential area that also housed offices, raising fears that residents may be among the dead.
Malik added that the exact number of casualties was still being verified as rescue operations continued at the crash site. “It appears there are no survivors in the plane crash. As the plane had fallen in a residential area which also had offices, some locals would have also died,” he said.
The tragedy marks the first major crash involving a Boeing 787 Dreamliner anywhere in the world, raising questions about Air India’s safety record and prompting public demands for a thorough investigation.
But is it the first time Air India experienced such a deadly crash? No. Here is what we have found.
Air India Express crash in Kozhikode: 21 dead, including both pilots
On August 7, 2020, an Air India Express Boeing 737 crashed in Kozhikode, Kerala, after overshooting a tabletop runway and plunging into a gorge. The flight, arriving from Dubai, was part of the Vande Bharat repatriation programme during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Piloted by Wing Commander Deepak Vasant Sathe and Captain Akhilesh Kumar, the aircraft was carrying 191 people. The crew made two landing attempts in heavy rain before the crash occurred.
The tragedy claimed the lives of 21 people, including both pilots.
Mangaluru crash 2010: one of India’s deadliest aviation disasters
On May 22, 2010, Air India Express Flight 812, a Boeing 737-800, crashed while landing at the Mangaluru airport, in Tannirbhavi. The aircraft, carrying 166 passengers and crew, overshot the tabletop runway, struck an instrument landing system structure, and broke apart.
The crash resulted in the deaths of 158 people, making it one of the worst air disasters in India’s history. Only eight passengers survived, while twelve victims could not be identified and were given a mass funeral.
Aviation experts noted that table-top runways, built on elevated terrain, pose challenges for pilots due to optical illusions, increasing the risk of overshooting during landings.
Kanishka bombing 1985: worst terror attack in India’s aviation history
On June 23, 1985, Air India Flight 182, also known as the ‘Kanishka’, exploded mid-air off the coast of Ireland, killing all 329 people on board. The Boeing 747-237B was en route from Montreal to New Delhi, with a scheduled stopover at London Heathrow, just 45 minutes away at the time of the explosion.
Most of the victims were Canadians of Indian descent. Investigations revealed that the disaster was caused by a bomb placed in a suitcase, planted by Sikh separatists in retaliation for the Indian Army’s 1984 assault on the Golden Temple in Punjab.
The attack remains India’s worst aviation terror incident and severely strained India–Canada relations for years.
Air India crash 1978: 213 killed in Arabian Sea disaster
On January 1, 1978, Air India Flight 855, en route to Dubai, crashed into the Arabian Sea shortly after takeoff from Santacruz Airport in Mumbai at 8:00 p.m.. The crash was caused by instrument failure, which led to spatial disorientation for the pilot and crew. The aircraft lost control and plunged into the sea.
All 213 people on board, including passengers and crew, were killed instantly, making it one of the deadliest aviation disasters in India’s history.
Air India Flight 171 crashed in the Arabian Sea after an engine fire in 1976
On October 12, 1976, Air India Flight 171, a Caravelle aircraft, crashed shortly after taking off from Bombay Airport en route to Madras.
The crash occurred when one of the plane’s engines caught fire mid-air. There were 95 people on board, including 89 passengers and six crew members. The accident resulted in the loss of all lives, adding to the list of tragic incidents in Air India’s aviation history.
Air India Flight 101 crashed into Mont Blanc in 1966, killing nuclear pioneer Homi Bhabha
On January 24, 1966, Air India Flight 101, a Boeing 707 named ‘Kanchenjunga’, crashed into the Mont Blanc mountains in Switzerland, killing all 117 people on board, including crew and passengers.
Among the victims was Dr. Homi J. Bhabha, a prominent nuclear physicist widely regarded as the father of India’s nuclear programme. The flight was travelling from Bombay to London, with scheduled stops in Delhi, Beirut, and Geneva.
The exact cause of the crash remains unclear to this day. The loss of Bhabha has given rise to various conspiracy theories, some suggesting sabotage due to his key role in India’s atomic energy ambitions.
1950 Mont Blanc crash: Air India’s ‘Malabar Princess’ kills 48 in Switzerland
On November 3, 1950, Air India Flight 245, a Lockheed Constellation aircraft nicknamed ‘Malabar Princess’, crashed into the Mont Blanc mountains on the French-Italian border, near Rocher de la Tournette at an altitude of about 4,677 metres.
The flight, travelling from Mumbai to London with scheduled stops, had departed from Cairo and was en route to Geneva when the crash occurred. All 48 people on board were killed. This was the first major international aviation disaster involving Air India, and tragically, it took place in the same region as the 1966 Mont Blanc crash.
Reactions from India’s civil aviation, the Indian Prime Minister, and the UK Prime Minister
India’s Minister of Civil Aviation, Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu, said he was “shocked and devastated” by news of the Air India crash in Ahmedabad. In a statement posted on social media, the minister assured the public that officials were on the “highest alert” and that he was personally monitoring the situation. He added that he had directed all aviation and emergency response agencies to take swift and coordinated action to manage the crisis.
“Rescue teams have been mobilised, and all efforts are being made to ensure medical aid and relief support are being rushed to the site,” Kinjarapu said.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has expressed deep sorrow over the Air India crash in Ahmedabad, calling it a “heartbreaking tragedy.”
In a statement, he said, “The tragedy in Ahmedabad has stunned and saddened us. It is heartbreaking beyond words. In this sad hour, my thoughts are with everyone affected by it.”
Modi added that he is in close contact with ministers and authorities who are working to support rescue efforts and assist those impacted by the disaster.
U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has reacted to the Air India crash in Ahmedabad, describing the incident as “devastating.”
In a statement, Starmer said, “The scenes emerging of a London-bound plane carrying many British nationals crashing in the Indian city of Ahmedabad are devastating.”
He is expected to receive regular updates as investigations and rescue efforts continue.
myjoyonline.com
International
US Vaccine Panel Withdraws Recommendation Of Covid-19 Jab For Adults

The Covid-19 vaccine, which has been formally recommended for the majority of Americans each year since the epidemic, is no longer advised for all adults, according to a vote by a significant US vaccine advisory group.
Additionally, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) decided against recommending Covid-19 vaccination prescriptions by a slim margin.
ACIP postponed preparations for a vote on the hepatitis B vaccination and modified its recommendations about the combined measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella (MMRV) vaccine during two days of deliberations.
The medical community was outraged when Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vaccine skeptic, dismissed all 17 committee members in June and personally chose their replacements.
Like the annual flu shot, the Covid-19 vaccine has been a standard recommendation for the past few years, and the panel spent Friday discussing it.
Acip decided to renounce widespread support for the jab’s recommendation, including for high-risk groups like those over 65.
Instead, it determined that they could consult a medical expert and then decide for themselves.
The federal government ceased advising healthy pregnant women and children to have the Covid-19 vaccine in May.
Dr. Robert Malone, Kennedy’s ally, contended in one discussion on Friday that there was no proof the Covid vaccination prevented serious infection.
Former Food and Drug Administration vaccine panelist Dr. Cody Meissner contended that there is “pretty well-defined” evidence that the vaccine prevents illness.
The MMRV vaccine issue caused misunderstanding between varicella (also known as chickenpox), measles, mumps, and rubella.
The group decided on Thursday not to recommend the combination MMRV vaccine for youngsters under the age of four.
However, they made the decision on Friday to support two different vaccinations: one for varicella and another for measles, mumps, and rubella.
“Leave parents confused” is how the American Medical Association, which advocates for physicians and medical students, described the new MMRV recommendations.
US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has questioned some vaccines’ efficacy and safety.
A vote on whether or not neonates whose mothers tested negative for hepatitis B during pregnancy should automatically receive a liver virus vaccination was also postponed by the panel.
Even while experts agree the hepatitis B vaccine is safe and effective at avoiding the infection, the Acip has raised questions about it for months.
Dr. Martin Kulldorff, the panel’s new head, questioned in June if it was “wise” to vaccinate newborns against hepatitis B.
Since 1991, the CDC has recommended that children be vaccinated against hepatitis B at birth.
Since then, the number of cases of the potentially fatal disease have decreased among people aged 19 and younger, which experts and the CDC credit to the implementation of the hepatitis B vaccine.
Since taking office in January, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s stance on immunizations has come under fire.
During his time there, Kennedy has reorganized the CDC. A group of senior staff members resigned in protest when he dismissed Susan Monarez, the head of the vaccine advisory panel, in late August and replaced the panel’s members in June.
Refusing to approve vaccine policy changes “regardless of the scientific evidence” led to Dr. Monarez’s dismissal, she said the Senate on Wednesday.
Kennedy claimed earlier this month that he fired Dr. Monarez because he believed their exchanges showed she was unreliable.
Doctors and health experts have criticised the health secretary’s longstanding questioning of the safety and efficacy of several vaccines, although in his Senate confirmation hearing, he said he was “not going to take them away”.
Africa
Mpox Vaccine Study To Begin In DRC Amid Outbreak

A new study is set to begin in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to assess the efficacy of the LC16m8 Mpox vaccine in African populations.
The launch comes as the country battles a major outbreak of the virus, which remains a continental public health emergency.
Health experts say the ongoing vaccination campaign in DRC offers a rare chance to gather real-world evidence about the vaccine’s performance. The study will look at how effective the vaccine is at preventing Mpox, including among children.
The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) is funding the project with up to 10.4 million US dollars, a statement issued on September 11, 2025, said. The International Vaccine Institute (IVI) will serve as the study sponsor, while the Institut National pour la Recherche Biomédicale (INRB) in the DRC will co-sponsor and also lead the research and the Japan Institute for Health Security (JIHS) will act as a co-investigator.
The study is supported by the DRC Ministry of Health and the Institut National de Santé Publique (INSP) and is expected to begin this Autumn once regulatory and ethics approvals are completed.
Researchers will monitor vaccinated people in hotspot health zones in Équateur Province. They will track how many still get infected and also collect safety data from a subset of participants.
The findings are expected to guide vaccination strategies in the DRC and other Mpox-endemic regions. They could also help decide which age groups should be prioritized for vaccination.
Japan has donated three million doses of LC16m8 to DRC to protect at-risk populations. The vaccine, developed by KM Biologics, has been licensed in Japan for decades as a smallpox vaccine. It is safe and effective, including in people with well-controlled HIV.
The DRC Health Minister, Samuel Roger Kamba, said the country will be the first in Africa to collect real-world field data on the vaccine.
“The epidemiological data on Mpox have enabled us to support the response with vaccination of the populations. With this collaborative research, the DRC will be the first African country to collect essential field data on the use of the LC16m8 vaccine against Mpox.”
Dr. Manabu Sumi of Japan’s Health Ministry said LC16m8 is the only Mpox vaccine currently approved for children and could protect people of all ages.
“Building on the findings of this trial and Japan’s accumulated experience, the Ministry looks forward to working with international partners to further enhance LC16m8’s contribution to global preparedness and response efforts against Mpox.”
Africa CDC Director-General, Dr. Jean Kaseya, described the study as “a vital step in protecting Africa’s most vulnerable, especially children.”
“By turning science into action, we are building the evidence needed to guide vaccination and strengthen health security across the continent.”
Other partners, including INRB and JIHS, stressed that the project will also strengthen Africa’s ability to respond to future health emergencies.
Director-General of INRB and Principal Investigator, Prof. Jean-Jacques Muyembe, said scientific collaboration is key.
“The results generated by this study will serve as an effective guide for future Mpox outbreaks,” he said.
Dr. Norio Ohmagari of JIHS said the trial will provide rigorous real-world evidence, while Dr. Mugen Ujiie of the same institute highlighted Japan’s commitment to protecting communities from Mpox.
“The findings will help inform equitable and effective vaccination strategies across affected regions,” Dr Ujiie said.
The International Vaccine Institute’s Deputy Director General, Dr. Florian Marks, added that the study will also help build local research capacity.
“In close partnership with INRB, JIHS, CEPI, and local health teams, we are also working to strengthen local research capacity so that communities are better equipped to respond to future health emergencies,” he said.
General Director of INSP, Dr. Dieudonné Mwamba, said vaccination remains a key pillar in responding to epidemics.
Mpox, formerly known as monkeypox, causes fever, headache, muscle aches, swollen lymph nodes and skin rashes with blisters. The disease can be deadly in severe cases.
WHO and Africa CDC declared the ongoing outbreak a global and continental emergency in August 2024. As of September 2025, Mpox remains a continental health emergency in Africa.
myjoyonline.com
International
US Judge Questions Deportation Of West African Migrants To Ghana

A U.S. judge on Saturday said it appeared that President Donald Trump’s administration intentionally circumvented immigration laws this week when it deported Nigerian and Gambian migrants to Ghana.
Judge Tanya Chutkan, based in Washington, D.C., scheduled an emergency hearing after lawyers representing some of the migrants said their clients expected they could be moved to their home countries, where they fear torture or persecution. Chutkan later ordered the Trump administration to file a report by 9 p.m. EDT explaining how it was trying to stop Ghana from sending the migrants to Nigeria or Gambia.
The deportations are part of Trump’s strategy to send migrants to “third countries” to speed their removal and pressure migrants in the U.S. illegally to leave. Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama said this week that his nation struck an agreement with the U.S. to accept West African deportees and had already received 14 people.
Chutkan said it appeared the Trump administration crafted the deal as a way “to make an end run” around U.S. legal requirements that it refrain from sending migrants to danger in their home countries.
“These are not speculative concerns,“ said Chutkan, an appointee of former President Barack Obama. “The concerns are real enough that the United States government agrees they shouldn’t be sent back to their home country.”
A lawsuit filed Friday on behalf of five of the migrants said they were taken from a Louisiana immigration detention center, shackled and put on a U.S. military plane without being told their destination. Several migrants on the flight were placed in straitjackets for 16 hours, the complaint said.
The five plaintiffs had U.S. legal protections against deportation to their home countries, the lawsuit said. One of the migrants, a bisexual man, has already been sent to Gambia and was in hiding, it said.
The other four have been held in squalid conditions in an open-air detention facility operated by the Ghanaian military, it said. In a court filing, the U.S. Department of Justice said it no longer had custody of the migrants, that the court lacked authority to intervene in diplomatic actions and that a Supreme Court decision in June allowed the government to send migrants to nations other than their country of citizenship. U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said that detainees on the flight were not made to wear straitjackets.
She did not comment on the allegations of circumventing immigration law.
Plaintiffs are represented by two advocacy groups, the American Civil Liberties Union and Asian Americans Advancing Justice.
The deportations have sparked criticism in Ghana.
In a statement on Friday, opposition lawmakers called for the agreement to be suspended, saying it should have been approved by Ghana’s National Assembly.
The deal “risks our country being perceived as aligning itself with the U.S. government’s current immigration enforcement regime, one which has been criticized as harsh and discriminatory,“ the statement said.
A Ghana government spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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