AHMEDABAD :
Rescuers had to pick up bodies with bare hands because they were so hot that even the gloves would melt
A NEW video has surfaced showing panicked residents of the BJ
Medical College (BJMC) in
Ahmedabad jumping off or
attempting to leap from the balcony of a five-storey building
when the Air India flight AI-171
slammed into their campus on
June 12.
In one of the frames of the
chilling video, a woman is seen
trying to climb down from the
balcony with the support of mere
railings with huge flames emanating from the crash site just
metres away.
In the background, people
recording the video from above
the peripheral wall of the campus could be heard shouting,
fearing the girl could fall and sustain injuries.
Later, a man is also seen trying to climb down in a similar
way.
The BJMC, one of the oldest medical colleges in India, has
been the epicentre of action following the crash, which killed
241 people on board the ill-fated flight and 29 on the ground,
including five MBBS students.
The London-bound AI flight,
a Boeing 737-8 Dreamliner,
crashed into the medical complex moments after taking off
from the Ahmedabad airport.
The impact of the crash was
such that the aircraft’s tail got
stuck in the hostel mess building and parts of the plane were
strewn across the residential
campus. Rescuers and first
responders described the ghastly nature of the crash and its
chaotic aftermath.
Chirag
Santoki, the hospital-based coordinator of the GVK EMRI Green
Health Services, which provides
ambulances service across
Gujarat, was at the Civil Hospital
in Ahmedabad, some 500 metres
from the crash site. He was one
of the first people to reach the
spot. Santoki saw UK citizen of
Indian origin Vishwas Kumar
Ramesh, the sole survivor of the
air crash who was occupying seat
No. 11A , coming out of the campus. “Blood was oozing out of his
head and he was speaking to
someone on a video call and
informing about the accident,”
he told PTI.
“When we heard the huge
crash sound and the explosion,
we rushed. But the heat from the
site could be felt even some 500
metres from the crash spot,”
Santoki said.
Santoki pointed out rescuers
had to pick up bodies with bare
hands because they were so hot
that even the gloves would melt.
Fire department personnel
would first pour water on the
charred remains, then collect
and pick them up.
Mukesh Solanki, a fleet pilot
of the ambulances whose job is
to look after maintenance of the
patient transport vehicles, said
some bodies were without head,
some without torso or limbs.