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BBC Gujarati, Ahmedabad
BBC News, Ahmedabad
The British man, who was the only survivor of Air India’s plane crash last week, helped his brother rest for a funeral in Western India.
Vishwashkumar Ramesh Ajai’s brother was also in the ill -fated flight, but he did not experience the tragedy.
A visibly upset Ramesh was one of Pal’s carriers who carried his brother’s ark to the crematorium in the town of Diu, his arm and face are still covered with white dressings. He spent the bigger part of the last five days in hospital.
London-related Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner crashes seconds after flying off Thursday from Western Indian city of Ahmedabad. At least 270 people were killed, most of them passengers.
The mother of G -n Ramesh was walking with the ark in blue sari with other sorrows as she held it on her right shoulder.
Several people from the city – who lost 14 other people in the crash – went out for the funeral, even when the rain threw the procession.
No one is clear how the Rames managed to survive. He even tried to return to the blazing plane to look for his brother, one of the first responding to the accident to the BBC.
In a new video that appeared earlier this week, the ambulance driver Satinder Singh Sandhu is the man seen leading the safety shoulder as he comes out of the place of the crash with flames and a thick smoke that curves in the air behind him.
D -Sandhu, head of the emergency ambulance in Ahmedabad, says he had no idea who was helping or that he had escaped from the plane. He only realized later on the same day on the news that the man was the only survivor of the crash.
The 40 -year -old Vishashukar Ramesh was 11a in the flight. His brother is reported to be sitting in several places.
All the other passengers and crew were killed, and nearly 30 people were also killed on the ground after the plane packed and crashed into a doctor’s hostel.
But the miraculously survived, managing to escape from the remains by opening in the fuselage.
The new video shows G -N Sandhu, who carries a blue turban, approaches the d -Rames and directs him to safety.
Sandhu said he had lunch with his colleagues when he first noticed “massive fire with thick smoke rising in the sky.”
“At first, we decided it could be a car accident or a gas cylinder explosion. We soon learned that it was a plane crash. I immediately instructed my team to bring an ambulance and rushed to the site.”
PtiSpeaking to the BBC Gujarati, G -N -Sandhu said he was just trying to do his job. In his decades, he said he had met many challenging situations.
But what surprised him this day was how, after being saved, he continued to try to return to the scene of the crash.
“He had no idea what he was doing. He continued to enter and leave the complex. We told him to stop and we pulled him to an ambulance so he could get medical attention,” said Sandhu.
“Then he told me that his relative was trapped and he wanted to go to save him. We did not speak a word after that.”
Later, Ramesh told DD News in India that he was trying to look for Ajay.
Pavan JaishwalAt the scene, Sandhu noticed a security guard who seemed to be injured. His clothes were partially burned and Mr. Sandhu first helped him.
“I also saw a woman. She was screaming with horror. Her son, who released a tea stall, was killed in the crash.”
Moments later, he saw the Ramesh coming out of the place of the crash in a white shirt.
He had injuries to the face and burned on his hands and looked visibly upset, said G -n Sandhu.
“At that moment we had no idea who the wounded man was. I thought he was one of the doctors who live in college. Later, when we saw the news, we realized that he was a lonely survivor of the crash.”
CHILAG, a member of the B -N -Sandhu ambulance team, told the PTI News Agency that G -N -Rames tells someone on a video call that his relatives are at the scene of the crash.
The first respondents were treated with him because of his injuries and put him in the injury center of a hospital nearby.
In his interview with DD News, Ramesh said he could not believe he had come out of the remains.
“For a moment I had the feeling that I would die too, but when I opened my eyes and looked around, I realized that I was alive.
“I still can’t believe how I survived. I came out of the ruins.”
The cause of the crash is still unknown. Officials are trying to decode voice booths and field recorders – collectively known as the black box – restored by the remains to make the incident together.
Additional reporting from Zoya Mateen in Delhi
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