Air India Crash: Airline Pilots' Association Seeks Fair, Fact-Based Probe
'We are once again surprised at the secrecy surrounding these investigations,' says the association.

Airline Pilots' Association of India demanded on Saturday a fair and fact-based probe into the Air India plane crash as it claimed that the tone and direction of the investigation into the Air India plane crash suggests a bias towards pilot error.
The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau has released its preliminary report into the fatal Boeing 787-8 plane crash on June 12. The report has found that the fuel supply to both engines of Air India flight AI171 was cut off within a second of each other, causing confusion in the cockpit and the airplane plummeting back to ground almost immediately after taking off.
The 15-page report says that in the cockpit voice recording, one unidentified pilot asked the other why he had cut off the fuel, which the other denied.
"The tone and direction of the investigation suggest a bias towards pilot error... ALPA India categorically rejects this presumption and insists on a fair, fact-based inquiry," Airline Pilots' Association of India said in a statement.
The association has also demanded that its representatives should be observers in the investigation process to ensure transparency and accountability.
ALPA India is a member associate of the International Federation of Airline Pilots' Association.
"We are once again surprised at the secrecy surrounding these investigations. We are also reiterating the fact that suitably qualified personnel are not taken on board for these crucial investigations," the association alleged in the letter.
"We feel that the investigation is being driven in a direction presuming the guilt of pilots and we strongly object to this line of thought," it alleged.
Noting that the report refers to a serviceability bulletin concerning the fuel control switch gates, which indicates a potential equipment malfunction, the association said: "while the bulletin exists, ALPA India demands clarity on whether the recommendations outlined in the bulletin were implemented prior to the flight."
On June 12, the London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner began to lose thrust almost immediately after taking off from the Ahmedabad airport and ploughed into a medical college hostel, killing all but one of the 242 onboard and another 19 on ground in the deadliest aviation accident in a decade.
A 15-page preliminary investigation report into the disaster revealed fuel-control switches of the two engines moved from the 'run' to the 'cutoff' position, within the space of one second, leading to immediate loss of altitude.
The report by Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau, released early on Saturday, neither concluded any reason for the switches moving nor apportioned explicit blame for the crash.
Air India has said that it will take on board its pilot community by holding dedicated sessions in the coming days to review the preliminary investigation report.