The flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder have been recovered from the site of an Indian passenger aircraft crash in a southern state, a top official at the Directorate General of Civil Aviation told Reuters on Saturday.

Both “black boxes” have been found, the official said.

Confirming the number of deaths, Indian Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Saturday tweeted, “18 people, including two pilots, have lost their lives, it is unfortunate. 127 people are at hospitals, others have been released.”

Quoting aviation experts, media reports said the ill-fated aircraft did not catch fire as the trained pilots could have switched off both the engines thus averting a bigger tragedy.
The mishap took place at 19:41 p.m. local time when the Air India plane, a Boeing-737, flying from Dubai skidded off the runway at Kozhikode Airport.

According to Puri, as per the flight manifest there were 190 people on flight AXB-1344, including 174 adult passengers, 10 infants, four cabin crew and two pilots.

Immediately after skidding off the runway, the plane broke into three parts. Fortunately, the plane did not catch fire.

Though officially the cause of the accident has not been announced yet, media reports said that the pilots tried to land the aircraft amid heavy rains and it skidded off the wet runway. The plane’s fuselage broke into three parts, with the cockpit falling in a 35-feet deep ditch hitting against one of the walls of the airport.

The civil aviation minister is leaving for Kozhikode to take stock of the situation.

Speaking to reporters in Delhi, he said that pilots must have tried to bring the flight to the end of airport’s runway where it skidded due to slippery conditions owing to monsoon.
The Kozhikode Airport is said to be a “tabletop airport” having a deep valley at the end of the runway.

The plane took off from Dubai on Friday evening and it made a hard landing at the Kozhikode Airport.

Rescue workers look for survivors after a passenger plane crashed when it overshot the runway at the Calicut International Airport in Karipur, in the southern state of Kerala, India, August 7, 2020.

Quoting aviation experts, media reports said the ill-fated aircraft did not catch fire as the trained pilots could have switched off both the engines thus averting a bigger tragedy.

The plane was carrying people stranded overseas amid the prevailing COVID-19 pandemic, under the “Vande Bharat Mission” – a special mission initiated by the Indian government.

The Kozhikode Airport is said to be the seventh busiest airport in the country, and has the shortest runway.

There are three such tabletop airports across India, the other two being at Mangalore in southern state Karnataka and in northeastern state of Manipur.

Rescuers work at the plane crashlanding scene at Kozhikode Airport in India’s southern state of Kerala, Aug 7, 2020. 
Rescuers work at the plane crashlanding scene at Kozhikode Airport in India’s southern state of Kerala, Aug 7, 2020. 

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