Ill-f ated runway 23 of ahmedabad airport back in news after 1988 crash

13 Jun 2025 12:29:37
 
news after 1988 crash
 
NEW DELHI/AHMEDABAD :
 
THE crash of air India plane near ahmedabad airport on Thursday was the second such major tragedy in the city since 1988, with both inci- dents linked to runway 23. as many as 133 people out of 139 on board were killed on October 19, 1988, when Indian airlines Flight 113 from Mumbai to ahmedabad crashed while approaching the air- port’s runway 23. Before crashing, the flight to London on Thursday had also taken off from runway 23.
 
Findings of a p robe into the 1988 incident attributed it to pilots’ error linked to descending below the min- imum altitude of 500 feet or 150 metre. There were reports that the two pilots had problems sighting the run- way and lost track of their altitude in their efforts to approach the air- port that lacked approach lights or visual approach slope indicator (VaSI). while the Directorate General of Civil aviation (DGCa) officials are still to arrive at a c onclusion on the cause of Thursday’s crash, court of inquiry into the 1988 crash had con- cluded that the aircraft hit trees and high-tension electricity tower close to Chiloda Kotarpur Village.
 
The plane crashed near Noble Nagar Housing Society, about 2.5 km from the approach end of runway due tothepilotsattemptingtoland withoutanyclearancefromthe Air Traffic Control, it said. The plane crash in 1988 resulted in the death of Professor Labdhi Bhandari from Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. Allsixcrewmembers,including two pilots, and 129 passengers, including 5 children, perished in the Ahmedabad crash in 1988. An inquiry panel had confirmed pilots’ poor judgement due to non-adherence to laid down procedure, under poor visibility conditions. Inasuit filed by victims’ kin, an Ahmedabad court had said that the degree of negligence on the part of the pilotin-command and the co-pilot of the Indian Airlines was so high that the same amounted to “recklessness” on their part as contemplated by the Carriage by Air Act, 1972.
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