It is 10:00 local time in Ahmedabad, where the crash site is now visible again in the light of day. Grieving families are mourning in the streets.

Here are some of the latest photos from the scene.

A man holds his hands up to his eyes as he sobs. Two other people's hands rest on his shoulders, comforting him. One person, whose face is not in the shot, holds a water bottle.Image source, Reuters
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A man weeps outside of the post-mortem room as he mourns a family member who died

A group of men in orange high-vis suits and helmet carry stretchers down the street.Image source, EPA
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National Disaster Response Force workers arrive at the scene of the crash, carrying stretchers

Two women hold each other and cry. Another woman looks on from behind them, concerned.Image source, Reuters
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Another pair wait outside the post-mortem room at a hospital

A man's hand holds up a phone. On the screen are a man and woman, smiling, and standing with a young boy and girl.Image source, EPA
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One man holds up his phone to show a picture of the relative he has lost in the crash

A group of men and women in lab coats sit around a table that holds water bottles and clear plastic test tubes with purple lids.Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

Medics have been cross-checking family DNA to that of the victims to identify their bodies

  • A view of the building where the plane crashedpublished at 05:21 British Summer Time 13 June

    Our reporter Vikas Pandey took this photo today of the damaged buildings at the crash site. As we have been reporting, the plane crashed into a doctors' hostel, an accommodation for local medical professionals.

    An aerial view of the building where the plane crashedImage source, Vikas Pandey/BBC
    Image caption,

    An aerial view of the building where the plane crashed

  • 'It's almost inexplicable' - aviation expert on sole survivorpublished at 05:18 British Summer Time 13 June

    British man Vishwashkumar Ramesh was the only person to survive the plane crash in Ahmedabad.

    "This is almost unheard of" Guy Gratton, associate professor of aviation and the environment at Cranfield University tells BBC Newsnight.

    "A modern airliner is designed to be crashworthy" meaning "if a crash happens everybody has the best possible chance of surviving," he says.

    Because of this,"either you see a large number of survivors, or you see none because the accident was so severe. So to see one is really unusual," Gratton adds.

    He says if he has to guess, Ramesh's seat - in 11A - could have been "thrown clear" from the plane in the crash, with him still in it, and he was "just incredibly lucky".

    "Seat 11A was near emergency exit" reads the headline of the graphic, with a subheading titled "Air India Boeing 787-8". A seat map of the Air India flight that crashed is shown in grey on a white background with seat 11A highlighted in red. It is a few rows ahead of the plane's wings and just behind an emergency exit. A smaller graphic of the plane highlights its length as 57m.Image source, Seatguru/BBC
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  • Forensic experts at crash sitepublished at 05:12 British Summer Time 13 June

    Forensic experts are at the crash site to gather evidence related to the accident.

    As we have been reporting, there is heavy police presence at the airport and on the roads leading to it today.

     of a forensic team and police officials present at the crash siteImage source, PTI
    Image caption,

    Forensic experts at the crash site

  • Lots of activity at hospital as Modi visitspublished at 05:06 British Summer Time 13 June

    Arunoday Mukharji
    Reporting from Ahmedabad

    I’m at the civil hospital in Ahmedabad where there’s a lot of activity.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi has just reached here to meet the people who were injured when the plane crashed into the doctors' hostel close to the airport.

    We know 241 people on board the plane were killed, but officials haven’t yet released the number of casualties on the ground or those injured after the plane hit the building.

    The media has been stopped a few metres away from the hospital. There’s heavy police presence.

    Picture from outside the civil hospital
    Image caption,

    Heavy police presence outside the civil hospital

    People holding their phones, trying to capture a building.
    Image caption,

    The media has been stopped a few metres away from the hospital that Modi is visiting

  • Modi arrives at the hospitalpublished at 04:57 British Summer Time 13 June

    We're now bringing you visuals of Prime Minister Narendra Modi reaching the civil hospital in Ahmedabad. He is expected to meet injured people and the families of victims.

    We'll keep bringing you updates.

    Media caption,

    PM Modi reaches civil hospital

  • Modi leaves crash site, heads to civil hospitalpublished at 04:47 British Summer Time 13 June

    Vikas Pandey
    Reporting from Ahmedabad

    Modi has now left the crash site after spending about 20 minutes there.

    He didn’t give any statement. Most media outlets were kept away.

    The prime minister is now headed to the civil hospital where he is likely to meet the families of the victims.

  • Heavy police presence as Modi visits crash sitepublished at 04:36 British Summer Time 13 June

    As we've just reported, PM Modi has reached the crash site. Here's a glimpse of the heavy security on the ground ahead of his arrival.

    Media caption,

    Heavy police presence at Modi expected to visit crash site

  • PM Modi reaches crash sitepublished at 04:35 British Summer Time 13 June

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has arrived at the crash site in Ahmedabad city.

    We'll bring you updates from the ground.

  • Uneasy silence on Air India Delhi-Ahmedabad flightpublished at 04:25 British Summer Time 13 June

    Vikas Pandey
    Reporting from Ahmedabad

    The crash was on everybody’s mind as I boarded the flight this morning. My co-engers, the crew and even the ground staff looked a bit tense.

    The usual cheer of the Air India cabin crew was replaced by a quiet namaste - the Indian way of greeting with folded hands.

    The engers next to me, and the ones in the row ahead, were busy discussing the probable causes of the crash.

    There were some Air India staff on this flight - many of them were heading to Ahmedabad to help with the families of the victims.

  • India announces a formal investigation into crashpublished at 04:22 British Summer Time 13 June

    Aircraft debris at the crash site of Air India Ltd. flight AI171 in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India, on Thursday, June 12, 2025Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Aircraft debris seen at the crash site

    Last night, India announced a formal investigation into the Air India crash.

    Federal Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu said that India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau has initiated the investigation in line with international protocols.

    "Additionally, the government is constituting a high-level committee comprising experts from multiple disciplines to examine the matter in detail," Kinjarapu said in a post on X. "The committee will work to strengthen aviation safety and prevent such incidents in future."

    On Thursday, Chris Rocheleau from the Federal Aviation istration (FAA) in the US had said that an "expert team" was on its way to India to help investigate the crash.

    UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer also said a team from the country had been dispatched to Gujarat to the investigation.

  • PM Modi set to visit crash site soonpublished at 04:13 British Summer Time 13 June

    Vikas Pandey
    Reporting from Ahmedabad

    Road leading to the site

    The road leading to the crash site has been blocked this morning.

    A police officer told me that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is due to visit shortly.

    Unlike yesterday, there is no crowd but there is heavy security deployment.

  • Airport centres set up to help relatives travel to Ahmedabadpublished at 03:59 British Summer Time 13 June

    Air India says it has set up assistance centres for friends and relatives at Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Delhi and Gatwick airports "to provide and take care of the needs of the families and loved ones".

    "These centres are facilitating the travel of family to Ahmedabad," the airline says in a tweet.

  • UK couple on plane shared video from airport before boardingpublished at 03:43 British Summer Time 13 June

    Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek sit next to each other in airport seats in the concourse of the airportImage source, Instagram
    Image caption,

    Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek posted an Instagram story before their flight

    A UK couple who filmed a video of themselves laughing and joking at the airport before taking off were among the 53 British nationals who were onboard the Air India flight.

    Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek, who run a spiritual wellness centre, posted an Instagram story referencing a "10-hour flight back to England".

    In an earlier post, they recalled their "mind-blowing" trip to India and said they wanted to make a vlog about it.

    Nick Meek, Jamie's brother, told the Times newspaper: "It's a lot to take in and we only heard this news a couple of hours ago."

    More: Who are the victims of the Air India plane crash?

  • Who owns Air India?published at 03:14 British Summer Time 13 June

    Peter Hoskins
    Business reporter in Singapore

    Air India was bought by the country's biggest multinational business Tata Group just over three years ago.

    The airline, which was founded in 1932 and was originally a Tata-owned company, had been under government ownership since 1953.

    Established in 1868, Tata Group is known as the "salt to software" conglomerate, with operations around the world ranging from telecoms to defence manufacturing and hotels to online retail.

    It owns a number of global brands including British luxury car maker Jaguar Land Rover, Tata Steel and tea firm Tetley.

    The production line at the Jaguar Land Rover factory in Solihull, UK, 7 April 2025.Image source, EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
  • Too early to consider grounding Boeing 787 flights, US suggestspublished at 02:32 British Summer Time 13 June

    Sean Duffy stands at a podium and gestures with his hands as he speaks at a media briefingImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Sean Duffy says his heart goes out to the families of the victims

    At a news conference earlier, US transport officials were asked if there was "anything that would lead you to believe that the 787 fleet needs to be grounded">And Duffy adds: "They have to get on the ground and take a look. Again, right now it'd be way too premature."

  • What does the crash mean for Boeing?published at 01:50 British Summer Time 13 June

    Nick Marsh
    Transport correspondent

    The Air India dreamliner plane in the skyImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Boeing's 787 Dreamliner aircraft was launched in 2011

    Last month, Boeing celebrated carrying its billionth enger on the 787 Dreamliner - an impressive feat given it only launched 14 years ago.

    Until today's tragic Air India crash in Ahmedabad, the model was a mainstay of intercontinental travel and had an exemplary safety record.

    So far, there is nothing to suggest any fault on Boeing's side today in India. A much fuller picture will come once the plane's black boxes - the electronic recording devices that store vital flight information - have been recovered.

    One pilot I spoke to said that nowadays it's rare for a manufacturer fault to cause a fatal incident.

    It's also important to that when you fly commercially, you will almost always either be on a Boeing or an Airbus model as the plane-making industry operates as an effective duopoly.

    Even so, Boeing has found its name associated with yet another tragic aviation incident.

  • 'I wonder if I’ll be able to take the flight ever again'published at 00:52 British Summer Time 13 June

    Zoya Mateen
    Reporting from Ahmedabad

    It was just two months ago in April, that Amaan Mansuri took the same AI171 flight that crashed today to return to London, where he works.

    “I had come down to Ahmedabad to celebrate Eid with my family. I’ve taken the same flight, same route three times before, it was like a routine for me and I’ve never felt unsafe.”

    Until now. Mansuri says he’s "shocked, terrified and in disbelief" since he heard about the crash.

    "Sitting here, I am still processing what happened. I wonder if I’ll be able to take the flight ever again."

  • British couple and four-year-old daughter among victimspublished at 00:24 British Summer Time 13 June

    Akeel Nanabawa, left, smiles, as does Hannaa Vorajee, who holds Sara in her arms. The family poses in front of white curtains over which drapes red fabricImage source, Family handout

    Britons Akeel Nanabawa and Hannaa Vorajee and their four-year-old daughter Sara are among the victims of the crash, it's been confirmed.

    Abdullah Samad, the headteacher of Sara's primary school describes Sara as a "ray of sunshine" who "lit up the classroom".

    Samad says the married couple, from Gloucester in England, were well-known for their charity work and generosity: "They touched lots of people and they will be missed by lots of people.

    "They helped fundraise for the humanitarian efforts in Gaza and medical care for poor individuals in India. That was part of their service to the community," he says.

  • 'What are we to do">Zoya Mateen
    Reporting from Ahmedabad

    Sameer Shaikh stands leaning against the back of a white car as he speaks to the press. He's wearing a dark blue, long-sleeved polo shirt, a long beard with a ginger tip and a white hat. To his left is a man also leaning against the car in a matching white hat and grey, open-collared shirt

    Sameer Shaikh says his son, Irfan - a crew member with Air India - didn’t call him very often, but he always informed him before taking off and after landing a flight.

    So when Shaikh received a call in the afternoon from the airline, he says he was confused - his son was supposed to be on his way to London on duty.

    “But instead, we found out he died in a crash.”

    Shaikh, who lives in Pune city, immediately flew down to Ahmedabad with his family to collect his son's body.

    He says an Air India official at the Civil Hospital helped him with the identification procedure required to claim the body.

    “But police didn’t let us take my son back. They asked us to come back in three days, after the DNA sampling all the victims was completed,” he alleges.

    Devastated, he and his wife have been pacing the hospital premises, looking for help and answers.

    “What are we to do?” He asks, pointing to his crestfallen wife, who sits in a corner of the street, sobbing inconsolably. "How can we wait three days when we know it’s our son?”