Families receive wrong bodies after Air India crash: reports

Air India crash

Grieving British families of the Air India crash victims have received the wrong bodies to bury in a bungled repatriation scheme.

A lawyer acting for the bereaved said that the remains of several victims had been wrongly identified, with one family forced to abandon funeral plans after allegedly being told the coffin contained a different, unidentified body.

Cockpit audio recovered from the flight recorders shows the plane’s junior first officer, Clive Kunder, asking its captain, Sumeet Sabharwal, why he had flipped the switches, starving the engines of fuel, according to a number of international media reports citing sources in the investigation.

James Healy-Pratt, a lawyer representing several British families, said that the remains of at least 12 British victims had been repatriated.

He told the Daily Mail: “I have been sitting down in the homes of these lovely British families over the last month, and the first thing they want is their loved ones back. But some of them have got the wrong remains and they are clearly distraught over this.

“It has been going on for a couple of weeks and I think these families deserve an explanation.”

In another instance, it has been reported that the remains of more than one person were put into a single coffin, and had to be separated before the funeral.

The mishandling of repatriations was only uncovered when Dr Fiona Wilcox, the senior coroner for inner west London, sought to verify their identities by matching them with DNA from their families who lost their loved ones in Air India crash.

Mr Healy-Pratt continued: “If [it] isn’t their relative, the question is, who is it in that coffin? Presumably, it’s another passenger, and their relatives have been given the wrong remains.

“The coroner also has a problem because she has an unidentified person in her jurisdiction.”

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