When a massive passenger plane slams into a residential neighborhood and explodes into a fireball, survival feels impossible. Yet somehow, 40-year-old Vishwash Kumar Ramesh defied every expectation and walked away from one of the deadliest air disasters in India’s history.
On June 12, Air India Flight AI171 took off from Ahmedabad, bound for London. But seconds after leaving the runway, the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner lost control and plunged directly into a residential building that served as housing for medical college staff and students. The fiery impact killed 270 people — everyone else on board, as well as many on the ground. But Ramesh, against all odds, survived.
The sheer improbability of his survival has captivated investigators, aviation experts, and the public alike. Some have even questioned whether his story could be true. How could anyone escape such carnage?
Now, a computer simulation released by AiTelly offers a glimpse into how Ramesh’s miraculous escape may have unfolded. According to the simulation, Ramesh may have either been ejected through a compromised emergency exit as the plane was descending or managed to escape seconds after impact through a broken door, moments before flames engulfed the wreckage.
Ramesh, a father from Leicester, UK, was seated in seat 11A next to his brother Ajay. The two had been traveling together. Only one would make it out alive.
“When I got up, there were bodies all around me. I was scared. I stood up and ran,”
Ramesh recalled from his hospital bed, speaking to local media.
“There were pieces of the plane all around me. Someone grabbed hold of me and put me in an ambulance and brought me to the hospital.”
Surveillance footage captured shortly after the crash shows Ramesh stumbling through the wreckage, soaked in blood, before a bystander leads him to first responders. The footage only deepens the mystery of how one man emerged from a scene of almost total devastation.
Speaking to India’s DD News, Ramesh shared more details that may help explain his survival. He said that the portion of the aircraft where he was seated did not strike the building directly and came to rest relatively close to the ground. The opposite side of the aircraft, however, was crushed against a wall, trapping others.
“The emergency door was broken,” he explained. “But I just walked out.”
Investigators are still piecing together what led to the disaster. Theories range from catastrophic engine failure to electrical system malfunctions. Ramesh described hearing “a loud noise” and seeing “flickering lights” moments after takeoff, suggesting that something critical may have gone wrong almost immediately.
“I saw people dying in front of my eyes — the air hostesses, and two people I saw near me,”
he recalled.
“For a moment, I felt like I was going to die too, but when I opened my eyes and looked around, I realised I was alive.”
“I still can’t believe how I survived. I walked out of the rubble.”
As investigators continue to analyze black box data and gather evidence, Ramesh’s astonishing escape remains one of the few slivers of hope to emerge from a tragedy that left hundreds of families grieving. For now, his survival stands as a haunting mystery — and an extraordinary story of chance, fate, or something even harder to explain.